IGC-Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência, Rua Quinta Grande 6, Oeiras, Portugal.
HBI-Hotchkiss Brain Institute, Cummings School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Anim Cogn. 2023 Jul;26(4):1307-1318. doi: 10.1007/s10071-023-01779-w. Epub 2023 May 15.
The alarm substance in fish is a pheromone released by injured individuals after a predator attack. When detected by other fish, it triggers fear/defensive responses, such as freezing and erratic movement behaviours. Such responses can also help other fish in the shoal to modulate their own behaviours: decreasing a fear response if conspecifics have not detected the alarm substance (social buffering) or triggering a fear response if conspecifics detected the alarm substance (social contagion). Response variation to these social phenomena is likely to depend on sex. Because males have higher-risk life-history strategies than females, they may respond more to social buffering where they risk not responding to a real predator attack, while females should respond more to social contagion because they only risk responding to a false alarm. Using zebrafish, we explored how the response of males and females to the presence/absence of the alarm substance is modified by the alarmed/unalarmed behaviour of an adjacent shoal of conspecifics. We found that, in social buffering, males decreased freezing more than females as expected, but in social contagion males also responded more than females by freezing at a higher intensity. Males were, therefore, more sensitive to visual information, while females responded more to the alarm substance itself. Because visual information updates faster than chemical information, males took more risks but potentially more benefits as well, because a quicker adjustment of a fear response allows to save energy to other activities. These sex differences provide insight into the modifying effect of life-history strategies on the use of social information.
鱼类的报警物质是一种由被捕食者攻击后的受伤个体释放的信息素。当被其他鱼类检测到时,它会引发恐惧/防御反应,如冻结和不稳定的运动行为。这种反应也可以帮助鱼群中的其他鱼类调节自己的行为:如果同类没有检测到报警物质,就会减少恐惧反应(社会缓冲);如果同类检测到报警物质,就会触发恐惧反应(社会传染)。对这些社会现象的反应变化可能取决于性别。因为雄性比雌性具有更高风险的生活史策略,所以它们可能对社会缓冲的反应更为敏感,因为它们可能冒着不回应真正捕食者攻击的风险;而雌性则应该对社会传染更为敏感,因为它们只会冒着对虚假警报做出反应的风险。我们使用斑马鱼研究了雄性和雌性对报警物质的存在/不存在的反应如何受到相邻同类鱼群的报警/未报警行为的影响。我们发现,在社会缓冲中,雄性的冻结减少程度大于雌性,这符合预期;但在社会传染中,雄性的冻结程度也比雌性高,这表明雄性比雌性更敏感于视觉信息,而雌性则对报警物质本身更敏感。因为视觉信息的更新速度比化学信息快,所以雄性承担了更多的风险,但也可能获得了更多的好处,因为更快地调整恐惧反应可以节省其他活动的能量。这些性别差异为生活史策略对社会信息使用的调节作用提供了深入的见解。