Paz Alexandra, Holt Karla J, Clarke Anik, Aviles Ari, Abraham Briana, Keene Alex C, Duboué Erik R, Fily Yaouen, Kowalko Johanna E
Wilkes Honors College, Florida Atlantic University, Jupiter FL.
Department of Biology, Texas A&M.
bioRxiv. 2023 Mar 29:2023.03.28.534467. doi: 10.1101/2023.03.28.534467.
Collective motion emerges from individual interactions which produce groupwide patterns in behavior. While adaptive changes to collective motion are observed across animal species, how local interactions change when these collective behaviors evolve is poorly understood. Here, we use the Mexican tetra, which exists as a schooling surface form and a non-schooling cave form, to study differences in how fish alter their swimming in response to neighbors across ontogeny and between evolutionarily diverged populations. We find that surface fish undergo a transition to schooling during development that occurs through increases in inter-individual alignment and attraction mediated by changes in the way fish modulate speed and turning relative to neighbors. Cavefish, which have evolved loss of schooling, exhibit neither of these schooling-promoting interactions at any stage of development. These results reveal how evolution alters local interaction rules to produce striking differences in collective behavior.
集体运动源于个体间的相互作用,这些相互作用产生了群体范围内的行为模式。虽然在各种动物物种中都观察到了集体运动的适应性变化,但当这些集体行为进化时,局部相互作用是如何变化的,我们却知之甚少。在这里,我们利用墨西哥丽脂鲤来研究鱼类在个体发育过程中以及在进化上不同的种群之间如何根据邻居的情况改变游泳方式的差异,墨西哥丽脂鲤有群居的表层形态和非群居的洞穴形态。我们发现,表层鱼类在发育过程中会经历向群居行为的转变,这种转变是通过个体间对齐和吸引力的增加而发生的,而这种增加是由鱼类相对于邻居调节速度和转向的方式变化所介导的。已经进化出失去群居行为的洞穴鱼在发育的任何阶段都没有表现出这些促进群居的相互作用。这些结果揭示了进化如何改变局部相互作用规则,从而在集体行为中产生显著差异。