IAMC-CNR, Località Sa Mardini, Torregrande, Oristano, Italy.
PLoS One. 2013 Jun 12;8(6):e65784. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0065784. Print 2013.
Animal groups such as fish schools, bird flocks and insect swarms appear to move so synchronously that they have long been considered egalitarian, leaderless units. In schooling fish, video observations of their spatial-temporal organization have, however, shown that anti-predator manoeuvres are not perfectly synchronous and that individuals have spatial preferences within the school. Nonetheless, when facing life-or-death situations, it is not known whether schooling fish react to a threat following a random or a hierarchically-based order. Using high-speed video analysis, here we show that schooling fish (Golden grey mullet, Liza aurata) evade a threat in a non-random order, therefore individuals that are first or last to react tend to do so repeatedly over sequential stimulations. Furthermore, startle order is strongly correlated with individual positional preferences. Because school members are known to follow individuals that initiate a manoeuvre, early responders are likely to exert the strongest influence on the escape strategy of the whole school. Our results present new evidence of the intrinsic heterogeneity among school members and provide new rules governing the collective motion of gregarious animals under predator attack.
鱼群、鸟群和昆虫群等动物群体的行动似乎非常同步,以至于它们长期以来一直被认为是平等主义的、无领导的单位。然而,对鱼类的视频观察表明,它们的时空组织并不是完全同步的,个体在鱼群中有空间偏好。尽管如此,当面临生死攸关的情况时,还不清楚鱼群在面对威胁时是随机反应还是基于等级的反应。使用高速视频分析,我们在这里表明,鱼类(金色灰鲻鱼,Liza aurata)以非随机的顺序逃避威胁,因此,第一个或最后一个反应的个体往往会在连续的刺激中反复这样做。此外,惊跳顺序与个体位置偏好强烈相关。因为已知鱼群成员会跟随发起动作的个体,所以早期的反应者很可能对整个鱼群的逃生策略产生最强的影响。我们的研究结果提供了关于鱼群成员内在异质性的新证据,并为群居动物在受到捕食者攻击时的集体运动提供了新的规则。