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资源竞争解释了卵胎生硬骨鱼在野外罕见的同类相食现象。

Resource competition explains rare cannibalism in the wild in livebearing fishes.

作者信息

Riesch Rüdiger, Araújo Márcio S, Bumgarner Stuart, Filla Caitlynn, Pennafort Laura, Goins Taylor R, Lucion Darlene, Makowicz Amber M, Martin Ryan A, Pirroni Sara, Langerhans R Brian

机构信息

Department of Biological Sciences Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Behaviour Royal Holloway University of London Egham UK.

Instituto de Biociências Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP) Rio Claro Brazil.

出版信息

Ecol Evol. 2022 May 16;12(5):e8872. doi: 10.1002/ece3.8872. eCollection 2022 May.

Abstract

Cannibalism, the act of preying on and consuming a conspecific, is taxonomically widespread, and putatively important in the wild, particularly in teleost fishes. Nonetheless, most studies of cannibalism in fishes have been performed in the laboratory. Here, we test four predictions for the evolution of cannibalism by conducting one of the largest assessments of cannibalism in the wild to date coupled with a mesocosm experiment. Focusing on mosquitofishes and guppies, we examined 17 species (11,946 individuals) across 189 populations in the wild, spanning both native and invasive ranges and including disparate types of habitats. We found cannibalism to be quite rare in the wild: most populations and species showed no evidence of cannibalism, and the prevalence of cannibalism was typically less than 5% within populations when it occurred. Most victims were juveniles (94%; only half of these appeared to have been newborn offspring), with the remaining 6% of victims being adult males. Females exhibited more cannibalism than males, but this was only partially explained by their larger body size, suggesting greater energetic requirements of reproduction likely play a role as well. We found no evidence that dispersal-limited environments had a lower prevalence of cannibalism, but prevalence was greater in populations with higher conspecific densities, suggesting that more intense resource competition drives cannibalistic behavior. Supporting this conclusion, our mesocosm experiment revealed that cannibalism prevalence increased with higher conspecific density and lower resource levels but was not associated with juvenile density or strongly influenced by predation risk. We suggest that cannibalism in livebearing fishes is rare in the wild because preying on conspecifics is energetically costly and only becomes worth the effort when competition for other food is intense. Due to the artificially reduced cost of capturing conspecifics within confined spaces, cannibalism in captive settings can be much more frequent.

摘要

同类相食,即捕食和消耗同种个体的行为,在分类学上广泛存在,并且据推测在野外具有重要意义,尤其是在硬骨鱼类中。尽管如此,大多数关于鱼类同类相食的研究都是在实验室中进行的。在这里,我们通过进行迄今为止最大规模的野外同类相食评估以及一项中宇宙实验,来检验关于同类相食进化的四个预测。以食蚊鱼和孔雀鱼为重点,我们在野外考察了189个种群中的17个物种(11946个个体),涵盖原生和入侵范围,包括不同类型的栖息地。我们发现同类相食在野外相当罕见:大多数种群和物种没有同类相食的迹象,当同类相食发生时,其在种群中的发生率通常低于5%。大多数受害者是幼鱼(94%;其中只有一半似乎是新生幼鱼),其余6%的受害者是成年雄鱼。雌性比雄性表现出更多的同类相食行为,但这只是部分地由它们更大的体型来解释,这表明繁殖所需的更高能量需求可能也起到了作用。我们没有发现证据表明扩散受限的环境中同类相食的发生率较低,但在同种密度较高的种群中发生率更高,这表明更激烈的资源竞争会促使同类相食行为的发生。支持这一结论的是,我们的中宇宙实验表明,同类相食的发生率随着同种密度的增加和资源水平的降低而增加,但与幼鱼密度无关,也不受捕食风险的强烈影响。我们认为,胎生鱼类的同类相食在野外很少见,因为捕食同种个体在能量上成本高昂,只有在对其他食物的竞争激烈时才值得付出努力。由于在有限空间内捕获同种个体的成本人为降低,圈养环境中的同类相食可能会更加频繁。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/f48e/9109233/3814db4e2813/ECE3-12-e8872-g006.jpg

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