Markham Michael R, Ban Yue, McCauley Austin G, Maltby Rosalie
*Department of Biology, The University of Oklahoma, 730 Van Vleet Oval, Norman, OK 73019, USA
†Cellular & Behavioral Neurobiology Graduate Program, The University of Oklahoma, 730 Van Vleet Oval, Norman, OK 73019, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2016 Nov;56(5):889-900. doi: 10.1093/icb/icw104. Epub 2016 Aug 22.
Weakly electric freshwater fish use self-generated electric fields to image their worlds and communicate in the darkness of night and turbid waters. This active sensory/communication modality evolved independently in the freshwaters of South America and Africa, where hundreds of electric fish species are broadly and abundantly distributed. The adaptive advantages of the sensory capacity to forage and communicate in visually-unfavorable environments and outside the detection of visually-guided predators likely contributed to the broad success of these clades across a variety of Afrotropical and neotropical habitats. Here we consider the potentially high and limiting metabolic costs of the active sensory and communication signals that define the gymnotiform weakly electric fish of South America. Recent evidence from two well-studied species suggests that the metabolic costs of electrogenesis can be quite high, sometimes exceeding one-fourth of these fishes' daily energy budget. Supporting such an energetically expensive system has shaped a number of cellular, endocrine, and behavioral adaptations to restrain the metabolic costs of electrogenesis in general or in response to metabolic stress. Despite a suite of adaptations supporting electrogenesis, these weakly electric fish are vulnerable to metabolic stresses such as hypoxia and food restriction. In these conditions, fish reduce signal amplitude presumably as a function of absolute energy shortfall or as a proactive means to conserve energy. In either case, reducing signal amplitude compromises both sensory and communication performance. Such outcomes suggest that the higher metabolic cost of active sensing and communication in weakly electric fish compared with the sensory and communication systems in other neotropical fish might mean that weakly electric fish are disproportionately susceptible to harm from anthropogenic disturbances of neotropical aquatic habitats. Fully evaluating this possibility, however, will require broad comparative studies of metabolic energetics across the diverse clades of gymnotiform electric fish and in comparison to other nonelectric neotropical fishes.
弱电淡水鱼利用自身产生的电场来描绘周围环境,并在黑夜和浑浊水域中进行交流。这种主动的感官/交流方式在南美洲和非洲的淡水环境中独立进化,那里分布着数百种广泛且数量众多的电鱼物种。在视觉条件不佳的环境中觅食和交流,以及在视觉引导的捕食者探测范围之外,这种感官能力的适应性优势可能促成了这些类群在各种非洲热带和新热带栖息地的广泛成功。在这里,我们考虑了南美洲裸背电鳗目弱电鱼所特有的主动感官和交流信号可能带来的高昂且具有限制作用的代谢成本。来自两个经过充分研究的物种的最新证据表明,发电的代谢成本可能相当高,有时超过这些鱼类每日能量预算的四分之一。维持这样一个能量消耗巨大的系统促使了一系列细胞、内分泌和行为上的适应,以总体上抑制发电的代谢成本,或应对代谢压力。尽管有一系列支持发电的适应性特征,但这些弱电鱼仍易受到缺氧和食物限制等代谢压力的影响。在这些情况下,鱼类可能会根据绝对能量短缺情况或作为一种主动保存能量的方式来降低信号幅度。无论哪种情况,降低信号幅度都会损害感官和交流性能。这些结果表明,与其他新热带鱼类的感官和交流系统相比,弱电鱼主动感知和交流的代谢成本更高,这可能意味着弱电鱼更容易受到新热带水生栖息地人为干扰的伤害。然而,要全面评估这种可能性,需要对裸背电鳗目电鱼的不同类群以及与其他非电新热带鱼类进行广泛的代谢能量学比较研究。