Zoological Institute, University of Basel, 4051 Basel, Switzerland; School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia; Queensland Brain Institute, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia; Research School of Biology, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia; Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB23EJ, UK.
Curr Biol. 2015 Mar 30;25(7):949-54. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.02.013. Epub 2015 Mar 19.
Animal communication is often deceptive; however, such dishonesty can become ineffective if it is used too often, is used out of context, or is too easy to detect [1-3]. Mimicry is a common form of deception, and most mimics gain the greatest fitness benefits when they are rare compared to their models [3, 4]. If mimics are encountered too frequently or if their model is absent, avoidance learning of noxious models is disrupted (Batesian mimicry [3]), or receivers become more vigilant and learn to avoid perilous mimics (aggressive mimicry [4]). Mimics can moderate this selective constraint by imperfectly resembling multiple models [5], through polymorphisms [6], or by opportunistically deploying mimetic signals [1, 7]. Here we uncover a novel mechanism to escape the constraints of deceptive signaling: phenotypic plasticity allows mimics to deceive targets using multiple guises. Using a combination of behavioral, cell histological, and molecular methods, we show that a coral reef fish, the dusky dottyback (Pseudochromis fuscus), flexibly adapts its body coloration to mimic differently colored reef fishes and in doing so gains multiple fitness benefits. We find that by matching the color of other reef fish, dottybacks increase their success of predation upon juvenile fish prey and are therefore able to deceive their victims by resembling multiple models. Furthermore, we demonstrate that changing color also increases habitat-associated crypsis that decreases the risk of being detected by predators. Hence, when mimics and models share common selective pressures, flexible imitation of models might inherently confer secondary benefits to mimics. Our results show that phenotypic plasticity can act as a mechanism to ease constraints that are typically associated with deception. VIDEO ABSTRACT.
动物间的交流通常具有欺骗性;然而,如果欺骗行为过于频繁、使用不当或易于被察觉,这种欺骗就会变得无效[1-3]。拟态是一种常见的欺骗形式,大多数拟态者在与其模型相比稀有时会获得最大的适应性收益[3,4]。如果拟态者过于频繁地被遇到,或者它们的模型不存在,那么对有毒模型的回避学习就会被打乱(贝氏拟态[3]),或者接收者会变得更加警惕并学会避免危险的拟态者(攻击性拟态[4])。拟态者可以通过不完全模仿多个模型[5]、通过多态性[6]或通过机会主义地部署拟态信号[1,7]来缓和这种选择性约束。在这里,我们揭示了一种逃避欺骗信号约束的新机制:表型可塑性允许拟态者使用多种伪装来欺骗目标。我们使用行为学、细胞组织学和分子方法相结合的方法,表明一种珊瑚礁鱼类,暗斑带鲷(Pseudochromis fuscus),能够灵活地调整其体色来模仿不同颜色的礁鱼,从而获得多种适应性收益。我们发现,通过匹配其他礁鱼的颜色,带鲷增加了捕食幼年鱼的成功率,因此能够通过模仿多个模型来欺骗它们的猎物。此外,我们证明,变色还增加了与栖息地相关的伪装,降低了被捕食者发现的风险。因此,当拟态者和模型受到共同的选择压力时,对模型的灵活模仿可能会给拟态者带来内在的次要收益。我们的研究结果表明,表型可塑性可以作为一种机制来缓解通常与欺骗相关的约束。视频摘要。