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- Title
Effects of group size on the threat-sensitive response to varying concentrations of chemical alarm cues by juvenile convict cichlids.
- Authors
Brown, Grant E.; Bongiorno, Tony; DiCapua, Daniel M.; Ivan, Laura I.; Roh, Ellie
- Abstract
The threat-sensitive predator avoidance model predicts that prey should balance the intensity of antipredator responses against perceived predation risk, resulting in a graded response pattern. Recent studies have demonstrated considerable interspecific variation in the intensity of threat-sensitive response patterns, ranging from strongly graded to relatively nongraded or "hypersensitive" threat-sensitive response patterns. Here, we test for intraspecific plasticity in threat-sensitive responses by varying group size. We exposed juvenile convict cichlids, Archocentrus nigrofasciatus (Günther, 1867), as individuals or in small (groups of three) or large (groups of six) shoals to a series of dilutions of conspecific chemical alarm cues and a distilled water control. Singleton cichlids exhibited significant reductions in time spent moving and in frequency of foraging attempts (relative to distilled water controls) when exposed to a 12.5% dilution of conspecific alarm cue, with no difference in response intensity at higher stimulus concentrations, suggesting a nongraded (hypersensitive) response pattern. Small shoals exhibited a similar response pattern, but at a higher response threshold (25% dilution of stock alarm cue solution). Large shoals, however, exhibited a graded response pattern. These results suggest that group size influences the trade-off between predator avoidance and other fitness related activities, resulting in flexible threat-sensitive response patterns.
- Subjects
CICHLIDS; CICHLID behavior; CAUSATION (Philosophy); RESPONSE consistency; PREDATORY animals; MATERIAL plasticity; GROUP size; DILUTION; WATER
- Publication
Canadian Journal of Zoology, 2006, Vol 84, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
0008-4301
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1139/Z05-166