Moore T Y, Danforth S M, Larson J G, Davis Rabosky A R
Robotics Institute, University of Michigan, 2350 Hayward St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, 1105 N. University Ave, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Integr Org Biol. 2020 Mar 2;2(1):obaa006. doi: 10.1093/iob/obaa006. eCollection 2020.
Warning signals in chemically defended organisms are critical components of predator-prey interactions, often requiring multiple coordinated display components for effective communication. When threatened by a predator, venomous coral snakes (genus ) display a vigorous, non-locomotory thrashing behavior that has previously been qualitatively described. Given the high contrast and colorful banding patterns of these snakes, this thrashing display is hypothesized to be a key component of a complex aposematic signal under strong stabilizing selection across species in a mimicry system. By experimentally testing snake response across simulated predator cues, we analyzed variation in the presence and expression of a thrashing display across five species of South American coral snakes. Although the major features of the thrash display were conserved across species, we found that predator cue type, snake body size, and species identity predict significant inter- and intraspecific variation in the propensity to perform a display, the duration of thrashing, and the curvature of snake bodies. We also found an interaction between curve magnitude and body location that clearly shows which parts of the display vary most across individuals and species. Our results suggest that contrary to the assumption that all species and individuals perform the same display, a high degree of variation exists despite presumably strong selection to conserve a common signal. This quantitative behavioral characterization presents a new framework for analyzing the non-locomotory motions displayed by snakes in a broader ecological context, especially for signaling systems with complex interaction across multiple modalities.
具有化学防御能力的生物的警示信号是捕食者与猎物相互作用的关键组成部分,通常需要多个协调的展示组件才能进行有效的交流。当受到捕食者威胁时,有毒的珊瑚蛇(属)会表现出一种剧烈的、非移动性的扭动行为,此前已有定性描述。鉴于这些蛇具有高对比度和色彩斑斓的带状图案,这种扭动展示被认为是在拟态系统中跨物种的强烈稳定选择下复杂警戒信号的关键组成部分。通过对蛇对模拟捕食者线索的反应进行实验测试,我们分析了五种南美珊瑚蛇扭动展示的存在和表现的变化。尽管扭动展示的主要特征在物种间是保守的,但我们发现捕食者线索类型、蛇的体型和物种身份可预测在展示倾向、扭动持续时间和蛇身弯曲度方面显著的种间和种内差异。我们还发现弯曲幅度和身体位置之间存在相互作用,这清楚地表明了展示的哪些部分在个体和物种间变化最大。我们的结果表明,与所有物种和个体都进行相同展示的假设相反,尽管可能存在强烈的选择以保留共同信号,但仍存在高度的变异性。这种定量行为特征为在更广泛的生态背景下分析蛇类展示的非移动性运动提供了一个新框架,特别是对于具有跨多种模式复杂相互作用的信号系统。