Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Department of Marine Science, Marine Science Institute, University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas, TX, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2018 Jan;87(1):223-234. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12758. Epub 2017 Oct 30.
Group-living is widespread among animals and comes with numerous costs and benefits. To date, research examining group-living has focused on trade-offs surrounding foraging, while other forms of resource acquisition have been largely overlooked. Air-breathing has evolved in many fish lineages, allowing animals to obtain oxygen in hypoxic aquatic environments. Breathing air increases the threat of predation, so some species perform group air-breathing, to reduce individual risk. Within species, individual air-breathing can be influenced by metabolic rate as well as personality, but the mechanisms of group air-breathing remain unexplored. It is conceivable that keystone individuals with high metabolic demand or intrinsic tendency to breathe air may drive social breathing, especially in hypoxia. We examined social air-breathing in African sharptooth catfish Clarias gariepinus, to determine whether individual physiological traits and spontaneous tendency to breathe air influence the behaviour of entire groups, and whether such influences vary in relation to aquatic oxygen availability. We studied 11 groups of four catfish in a laboratory arena and recorded air-breathing behaviour, activity and agonistic interactions at varying levels of hypoxia. Bimodal respirometry was used to estimate individual standard metabolic rate (SMR) and the tendency to utilize aerial oxygen when alone. Fish took more air breaths in groups as compared to when they were alone, regardless of water oxygen content, and displayed temporally clustered air-breathing behaviour, consistent with existing definitions of synchronous air-breathing. However, groups displayed tremendous variability in surfacing behaviour. Aggression by dominant individuals within groups was the main factor influencing air-breathing of the entire group. There was no association between individual SMR, or the tendency to obtain oxygen from air when in isolation, and group air-breathing. For C. gariepinus, synchronous air-breathing is strongly influenced by agonistic interactions, which may expose subordinate individuals to risk of predation. Influential individuals exerted an overriding effect on risk-taking by the entire group, for reasons independent of their physiological oxygen requirements. Overall, this illustrates that social context can obscure interactions between an individual's physiological and behavioural traits and their tendency to take risks to obtain resources.
群居在动物中很普遍,它伴随着许多成本和好处。迄今为止,研究群居动物的研究集中在觅食方面的权衡,而其他形式的资源获取在很大程度上被忽视了。许多鱼类谱系都进化出了呼吸空气的能力,使动物能够在缺氧的水生环境中获得氧气。呼吸空气会增加被捕食的威胁,因此一些物种会进行群体呼吸空气,以降低个体风险。在物种内,个体呼吸空气的行为会受到代谢率和个性的影响,但群体呼吸空气的机制仍未得到探索。可以想象,具有高代谢需求或内在呼吸空气倾向的关键个体可能会推动社会呼吸,特别是在缺氧的情况下。我们研究了非洲尖齿鲶 Clarias gariepinus 的社会呼吸空气行为,以确定个体生理特征和呼吸空气的自发倾向是否会影响整个群体的行为,以及这种影响是否与水生氧气供应有关。我们在一个实验室竞技场中研究了 11 组 4 条鲶鱼,并记录了不同缺氧水平下的呼吸空气行为、活动和攻击相互作用。双模态呼吸测量法用于估计个体标准代谢率 (SMR) 和单独使用空气氧气的倾向。无论水的含氧量如何,鱼在群体中呼吸空气的次数都比单独时多,并且表现出时间上集群的呼吸空气行为,与现有的同步呼吸空气的定义一致。然而,群体在浮出水面的行为上表现出巨大的可变性。群体内占主导地位的个体的攻击性是影响整个群体呼吸空气的主要因素。个体 SMR 或单独获取空气氧气的倾向与群体呼吸空气之间没有关联。对于 C. gariepinus,同步呼吸空气强烈受到攻击相互作用的影响,这可能使从属个体面临被捕食的风险。有影响力的个体对整个群体的冒险行为施加了一种压倒一切的影响,原因独立于它们的生理氧气需求。总的来说,这表明社会环境可以掩盖个体的生理和行为特征与其获取资源的风险倾向之间的相互作用。