Garcia Tiffany S, Urbina Jenny C, Bredeweg Evan M, Ferrari Maud C O
104 Nash Hall, Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, 97331, USA.
Environmental Science Program, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, 97331, USA.
Oecologia. 2017 Jul;184(3):623-631. doi: 10.1007/s00442-017-3905-5. Epub 2017 Jul 1.
Carry-over effects influence trait responses in later life stages as a result of early experience with environmental cues. Predation risk is an influential stressor and selection exists for early recognition of threats. In particular, invasive species may benefit from carry-over effects by preemptively recognizing and responding to novel predators via latent developmental changes and embryonic learning. In a factorial experiment, we conditioned invasive American bullfrog embryos (Lithobates catesbeianus) to the odor of a novel fish predator, largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) alone or in combination with injured conspecific cues. We quantified developmental carryover in the larval life stage and found that individuals conditioned to the highest risk (fish and injured conspecific cues) grew into longer bodied larvae relative to larvae from lower risk treatments. We also assessed embryonic learning, a behavioral carry-over effect, and found an interaction between embryonic conditioning and larval exposure. Behavioral responses were only found in scenarios when predation risk varied in intensity across life history stages, thus requiring a more flexible antipredator strategy. This indicates a potential trade-off between the two strategies in larval growth and development rates, and time until metamorphosis. Our results suggest that early predator exposure and carry-over effects have significant impacts on life history trajectories for American bullfrogs. This research contributes to our understanding of a potentially important invasion mechanism in an anuran species of conservation concern.
由于早期对环境线索的体验,遗留效应会影响后期生命阶段的性状反应。捕食风险是一种有影响力的应激源,且存在对早期威胁识别的选择。特别是,入侵物种可能通过潜在的发育变化和胚胎学习,抢先识别并应对新的捕食者,从而从遗留效应中受益。在一项析因实验中,我们使入侵的美国牛蛙胚胎(牛蛙)单独或与受伤的同种线索组合,接触新的鱼类捕食者大口黑鲈(Micropterus salmoides)的气味。我们量化了幼体生命阶段的发育遗留效应,发现相对于低风险处理组的幼体,接触最高风险(鱼类和受伤的同种线索)的个体发育成了体型更长的幼体。我们还评估了胚胎学习,一种行为遗留效应,并发现胚胎条件作用和幼体暴露之间存在相互作用。仅在捕食风险在整个生活史阶段强度不同的情况下才发现行为反应,因此需要更灵活的反捕食策略。这表明在幼体生长发育速度和变态所需时间这两种策略之间存在潜在的权衡。我们的结果表明,早期接触捕食者和遗留效应会对美国牛蛙的生活史轨迹产生重大影响。这项研究有助于我们理解一种在受保护的无尾目物种中潜在的重要入侵机制。