Suppr超能文献

幼体特征会延续影响一种常见珊瑚礁鱼类的定居后行为。

Larval traits carry over to affect post-settlement behaviour in a common coral reef fish.

作者信息

Dingeldein Andrea L, White J Wilson

机构信息

Department of Biology and Marine Biology, University of North Carolina Wilmington, 601 S. College Rd., Wilmington, NC, 28403, USA.

出版信息

J Anim Ecol. 2016 Jul;85(4):903-14. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12506. Epub 2016 May 5.

Abstract

Most reef fishes begin life as planktonic larvae before settling to the reef, metamorphosing and entering the benthic adult population. Different selective forces determine survival in the planktonic and benthic life stages, but traits established in the larval stage may carry over to affect post-settlement performance. We tested the hypothesis that larval traits affect two key post-settlement fish behaviours: social group-joining and foraging. Certain larval traits of reef fishes are permanently recorded in the rings in their otoliths. In the bluehead wrasse (Thalassoma bifasciatum), prior work has shown that key larval traits recorded in otoliths (growth rate, energetic condition at settlement) carry over to affect post-settlement survival on the reef, with higher-larval-condition fish experiencing less post-settlement mortality. We hypothesized that this selective mortality is mediated by carry-over effects on post-settlement antipredator behaviours. We predicted that better-condition fish would forage less and be more likely to join groups, both behaviours that would reduce predation risk. We collected 550 recently settled bluehead wrasse (Thalassoma bifasciatum) from three reef sites off St. Croix (USVI) and performed two analyses. First, we compared each settler's larval traits to the size of its social group to determine whether larval traits influenced group-joining behaviour. Secondly, we observed foraging behaviour in a subset of grouped and solitary fish (n = 14) for 1-4 days post-settlement. We then collected the fish and tested whether larval traits influenced the proportion of time spent foraging. Body length at settlement, but not condition, affected group-joining behaviour; smaller fish were more likely to remain solitary or in smaller groups. However, both greater length and better condition were associated with greater proportions of time spent foraging over four consecutive days post-settlement. Larval traits carry over to affect post-settlement behaviour, although not as we expected: higher quality larvae join groups more frequently (safer) but then forage more. Foraging is risky but may allow faster post-settlement growth, reducing mortality risk in the long run. This shows that behaviour likely serves as a mechanistic link connecting larval traits to post-settlement selective mortality.

摘要

大多数珊瑚礁鱼类在定居到珊瑚礁之前,最初是以浮游幼虫的形式存在,之后经历变态发育,进入底栖成年群体。不同的选择压力决定了浮游和底栖生活阶段的生存情况,但幼虫阶段形成的特征可能会延续下去,影响定居后的表现。我们检验了一个假设,即幼虫特征会影响定居后鱼类的两种关键行为:加入社会群体和觅食。珊瑚礁鱼类的某些幼虫特征会永久记录在它们耳石的年轮中。在蓝头濑鱼(Thalassoma bifasciatum)中,先前的研究表明,记录在耳石中的关键幼虫特征(生长速度、定居时的能量状况)会延续下去,影响在珊瑚礁上定居后的生存情况,幼虫状况较好的鱼定居后的死亡率较低。我们假设这种选择性死亡率是由对定居后反捕食行为的延续效应介导的。我们预测,状况较好的鱼会减少觅食,更有可能加入群体,这两种行为都能降低被捕食的风险。我们从美属维尔京群岛圣克罗伊岛外的三个珊瑚礁地点收集了550条刚定居的蓝头濑鱼(Thalassoma bifasciatum),并进行了两项分析。首先,我们将每条定居鱼的幼虫特征与其社会群体的大小进行比较,以确定幼虫特征是否影响加入群体的行为。其次,我们观察了一部分成群和独居的鱼(n = 14)在定居后1至4天的觅食行为。然后我们收集这些鱼,测试幼虫特征是否影响觅食所花费的时间比例。定居时的体长而非状况影响加入群体的行为;较小的鱼更有可能保持独居或加入较小的群体。然而,在定居后的连续四天里,体长更长和状况更好都与花费更多时间觅食有关。幼虫特征会延续下去影响定居后的行为,尽管与我们预期的不同:质量较高的幼虫更频繁地加入群体(更安全),但随后觅食更多。觅食有风险,但从长远来看可能会使定居后生长更快,降低死亡风险。这表明行为可能是连接幼虫特征和定居后选择性死亡率的一种机制性纽带。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验