Krause J, Herbert-Read J E, Seebacher F, Domenici P, Wilson A D M, Marras S, Svendsen M B S, Strömbom D, Steffensen J F, Krause S, Viblanc P E, Couillaud P, Bach P, Sabarros P S, Zaslansky P, Kurvers R H J M
Department of Biology and Ecology of Fishes, Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries, Müggelseedamm 310, 12587 Berlin, Germany
Albrecht Daniel Thaer-Institute, Faculty of Life Sciences, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Invalidenstrasse 42, 10115 Berlin, Germany.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2017 Aug 19;372(1727). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2016.0232.
The costs and benefits of group living often depend on the spatial position of individuals within groups and the ability of individuals to occupy preferred positions. For example, models of predation events for moving prey groups predict higher mortality risk for individuals at the periphery and front of groups. We investigated these predictions in sardine () schools under attack from group hunting sailfish () in the open ocean. Sailfish approached sardine schools about equally often from the front and rear, but prior to attack there was a chasing period in which sardines attempted to swim away from the predator. Consequently, all sailfish attacks were directed at the rear and peripheral positions of the school, resulting in higher predation risk for individuals at these positions. During attacks, sailfish slash at sardines with their bill causing prey injury including scale removal and tissue damage. Sardines injured in previous attacks were more often found in the rear half of the school than in the front half. Moreover, injured fish had lower tail-beat frequencies and lagged behind uninjured fish. Injuries inflicted by sailfish bills may, therefore, hinder prey swimming speed and drive spatial sorting in prey schools through passive self-assortment. We found only partial support for the theoretical predictions from current predator-prey models, highlighting the importance of incorporating more realistic predator-prey dynamics into these models.This article is part of the themed issue 'Physiological determinants of social behaviour in animals'.
群居的成本和收益通常取决于个体在群体中的空间位置以及个体占据偏好位置的能力。例如,针对移动猎物群体的捕食事件模型预测,处于群体边缘和前端的个体面临更高的死亡风险。我们在公海中遭受群居猎食的旗鱼攻击的沙丁鱼群中研究了这些预测。旗鱼从正面和背面接近沙丁鱼群的频率大致相同,但在攻击之前有一个追逐期,在此期间沙丁鱼试图游开捕食者。因此,所有旗鱼的攻击都针对鱼群的后部和边缘位置,导致这些位置的个体面临更高的捕食风险。在攻击过程中,旗鱼用它们的喙猛击沙丁鱼,造成猎物受伤,包括鳞片脱落和组织损伤。在之前攻击中受伤的沙丁鱼更多地出现在鱼群后半部分而非前半部分。此外,受伤的鱼尾鳍摆动频率较低,落在未受伤的鱼后面。因此,旗鱼喙造成的伤害可能会阻碍猎物的游泳速度,并通过被动自我分类推动猎物群体中的空间排序。我们仅部分支持当前捕食者 - 猎物模型的理论预测,这凸显了将更现实的捕食者 - 猎物动态纳入这些模型的重要性。本文是主题为“动物社会行为的生理决定因素”的特刊的一部分。