Snipers, working alone, rely heavily on effective camouflage. This is often provided by a ghillie suit, a whole-body covering fitted with many loops into which the wearer can insert grass or other plant materials to match the local environment, or are made with cloth simulating tufts of leaves. Such good camouflage comes at the price of the weight of the ghillie suit and the attached materials; the suit is hot and uncomfortable to wear in hot weather, and it restricts mobility. The ghillie suit was developed by
Scottish gamekeepers for hunting deer, and adapted initially by a Scottish Highland regiment, the
Lovat Scouts, for military use. In 1916, the Lovat Scouts became the British Army's first sniper unit. Snipers of many armies have since then adopted the ghillie suit for the effective concealment that it affords. Cott used the example of the larva of the
blotched emerald moth, which fixes a screen of fragments of leaves to its specially hooked bristles, to argue that
military camouflage had used the same method, pointing out that the "device is ... essentially the same as one widely practised during the
Great War for the concealment, not of caterpillars, but of
caterpillar-tractors, gun battery|[gun] battery positions,
observation posts and so forth." File:British and French Snipers ln camouflage Ghillie suits during Ex Boars Head (edited, background changed.jpg|British and French
snipers in ghillie suits File:Swedish paratrooper on skis with FN Minimi Para, wearing camouflage Ghillie suit (cropped).jpg|Swedish paratrooper on skis with a winter ghillie suit ==References==