Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Science, University of Nevada Reno, Reno, NV 89557, USA.
Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210, USA.
Toxins (Basel). 2020 Sep 27;12(10):617. doi: 10.3390/toxins12100617.
Using venom for predation often leads to the evolution of resistance in prey. Understanding individual variation in venom resistance is key to unlocking basic mechanisms by which antagonistic coevolution can sustain variation in traits under selection. For prey, the opposing challenges of predator avoidance and resource acquisition often lead to correlated levels of risk and reward, which in turn can favor suites of integrated morphological, physiological and behavioral traits. We investigate the relationship between risk-sensitive behaviors, physiological resistance to rattlesnake venom, and stress in a population of California ground squirrels. For the same individuals, we quantified foraging decisions in the presence of snake predators, fecal corticosterone metabolites (a measure of "stress"), and blood serum inhibition of venom enzymatic activity (a measure of venom resistance). Individual responses to snakes were repeatable for three measures of risk-sensitive behavior, indicating that some individuals were consistently risk-averse whereas others were risk tolerant. Venom resistance was lower in squirrels with higher glucocorticoid levels and poorer body condition. Whereas resistance failed to predict proximity to and interactions with snake predators, individuals with higher glucocorticoid levels and in lower body condition waited the longest to feed when near a snake. We compared alternative structural equation models to evaluate alternative hypotheses for the relationships among stress, venom resistance, and behavior. We found support for stress as a shared physiological correlate that independently lowers venom resistance and leads to squirrels that wait longer to feed in the presence of a snake, whereas we did not find evidence that resistance directly facilitates latency to forage. Our findings suggest that stress may help less-resistant squirrels avoid a deadly snakebite, but also reduces feeding opportunities. The combined lethal and non-lethal effects of stressors in predator-prey interactions simultaneously impact multiple key traits in this system, making environmental stress a potential contributor to geographic variation in trait expression of toxic predators and resistant prey.
利用毒液进行捕食通常会导致猎物产生抗药性。了解毒液抗性的个体差异是揭示拮抗协同进化如何维持受选择影响的特征变异的基本机制的关键。对于猎物来说,避免捕食者和获取资源的对立挑战往往导致风险和回报的相关性,这反过来又有利于整合的形态、生理和行为特征的综合。我们研究了加利福尼亚地松鼠种群中与风险敏感行为、对响尾蛇毒液的生理抗性和压力相关的关系。对于相同的个体,我们量化了在存在蛇类捕食者的情况下的觅食决策、粪便皮质酮代谢物(衡量“压力”的指标)以及血液血清抑制毒液酶活性(衡量毒液抗性的指标)。对于三种风险敏感行为的个体反应是可重复的,这表明有些个体始终是风险规避者,而有些个体则是风险容忍者。皮质酮水平较高和身体状况较差的松鼠的毒液抗性较低。尽管抗性与接近蛇类和与蛇类捕食者的相互作用无关,但皮质酮水平较高和身体状况较差的个体在靠近蛇类时等待进食的时间最长。我们比较了替代结构方程模型,以评估压力、毒液抗性和行为之间关系的替代假设。我们发现压力是一个共同的生理相关因素,可以独立降低毒液抗性,并导致松鼠在蛇类存在时等待更长时间进食,而我们没有发现抗性直接促进觅食潜伏期的证据。我们的研究结果表明,压力可能有助于抵抗力较低的松鼠避免致命的蛇咬伤,但也会减少觅食机会。在这种系统中,捕食者-猎物相互作用中同时具有致命和非致命作用的应激源会同时影响多个关键特征,使环境压力成为有毒捕食者和抗性猎物的特征表达的地理变异的潜在因素。