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丽鱼科鱼类亲属群聚与扩散中的性别偏见

Sex biases in kin shoaling and dispersal in a cichlid fish.

作者信息

van Dongen Wouter F D, Wagner Richard H, Moodley Yoshan, Schaedelin Franziska C

机构信息

Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology, Department of Integrative Biology and Evolution, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Vienna, Austria,

出版信息

Oecologia. 2014 Dec;176(4):965-74. doi: 10.1007/s00442-014-3079-3. Epub 2014 Sep 18.

Abstract

Animal dispersal is associated with diverse costs and benefits that vary among individuals based on phenotype and ecological conditions. For example, females may disperse when males benefit more from defending territories in familiar environments. Similarly, size differences in dispersal propensity may occur when dispersal costs are size-dependent. When individuals do disperse, they may adopt behavioral strategies that minimize dispersal costs. Dispersing fish, for example, may travel within shoals to reduce predation risks. Further, kin shoaling may augment inclusive fitness by reducing predation of relatives. However, studies are lacking on the role of kin shoaling in dispersal. We explored how sex and size influence dispersal and kin shoaling in the cichlid Neolamprologus caudopunctatus. We microsatellite genotyped over 900 individuals from two populations separated by a potential dispersal barrier, and documented patterns of population structure, migration and within-shoal relatedness. Genetic differentiation across the barrier was greater for smaller than larger fish, suggesting larger fish had dispersed longer distances. Females exhibited weaker genetic differentiation and 11 times higher migration rates than males, indicating longer-distance female-biased dispersal. Small females frequently shoaled with siblings, possibly offsetting dispersal costs associated with higher predation risks. In contrast, small males appeared to avoid kin shoaling, possibly to avoid local resource competition. In summary, long-distance dispersal in N. caudopunctatus appears to be female-biased, and kin-based shoaling by small females may represent a behavioral adaptation that reduces dispersal costs. Our study appears to be the first to provide evidence that sex differences in dispersal influence sex differences in kin shoaling.

摘要

动物扩散与多种成本和收益相关,这些成本和收益因个体的表型和生态条件而异。例如,当雄性在熟悉的环境中保卫领地获益更多时,雌性可能会扩散。同样,当扩散成本与体型相关时,扩散倾向可能会出现大小差异。当个体确实进行扩散时,它们可能会采取行为策略来最小化扩散成本。例如,扩散的鱼类可能会在鱼群中游动以降低被捕食的风险。此外,亲属聚集在一起可能通过减少亲属被捕食来提高广义适合度。然而,关于亲属聚集在扩散中的作用的研究还很缺乏。我们探究了性别和体型如何影响丽鱼科新亮丽鲷的扩散和亲属聚集。我们对来自两个被潜在扩散障碍隔开的种群的900多个个体进行了微卫星基因分型,并记录了种群结构、迁移和鱼群内亲缘关系的模式。障碍两侧较小的鱼比大一些的鱼遗传分化更大,这表明较大的鱼扩散的距离更长。雌性表现出较弱的遗传分化,迁移率是雄性的11倍,这表明雌性有偏向长距离的扩散。小体型的雌性经常与兄弟姐妹聚集在一起,这可能抵消了与更高捕食风险相关的扩散成本。相比之下,小体型的雄性似乎避免亲属聚集,可能是为了避免本地资源竞争。总之,新亮丽鲷的长距离扩散似乎存在雌性偏向,小体型雌性基于亲属关系的聚集可能代表了一种行为适应,可降低扩散成本。我们的研究似乎是第一个提供证据表明扩散中的性别差异会影响亲属聚集中的性别差异的研究。

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