Suppr超能文献

在恐惧的世界中前行:果蝇表现出明显的抗捕食者和抗寄生虫防御行为。

Navigating the landscape of fear: Fruit flies exhibit distinct antipredator and antiparasite defensive behaviors.

机构信息

Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

出版信息

Ecology. 2024 Oct;105(10):e4397. doi: 10.1002/ecy.4397. Epub 2024 Sep 2.

Abstract

Most organisms are at risk of being consumed by a predator or getting infected by a parasite at some point in their life. Theoretical constructs such as the landscape of fear (perception of risk) and nonconsumptive effects (NCEs, costly responses sans predation or infection) have been proposed to describe and quantify antipredator and antiparasite responses. How prey/host species identify and respond to these risks determines their survival, reproductive success and, ultimately, fitness. Most studies to date have focused on either predator-prey or parasite-host interactions, yet habitats and ecosystems contain both parasitic and/or predatory species that represent a complex and heterogenous mosaic of risk factors. Here, we experimentally investigated the behavioral responses of a cactophilic fruit fly, Drosophila nigrospiracula, exposed to a range of species that include parasites (ectoparasitic mite), predators (jumping spiders), as well as harmless heterospecifics (nonparasitic mites, ants, and weevils). We demonstrate that D. nigrospiracula can differentiate between threat and non-threat species, increase erratic movements and decrease velocity in the presence of parasites, but decrease erratic movements and time spent grooming in the presence of predators. Of particular importance, flies could distinguish between parasitic female mites and nonparasitic male mites of the same species, and respond accordingly. We also show that the direction of these NCEs differs when exposed to parasitic mites (i.e., risk of infection) versus spiders (i.e., risk of predation). Given the opposing effects of predation versus infection risk on fly behavior, we discuss potential trade-offs between parasite and predator avoidance behaviors. Our findings illustrate the complexity of risk assessment in a landscape of fear and the fine-tuned NCEs that arise in response. Moreover, this study is the first to examine these behavioral NCEs in a terrestrial system.

摘要

大多数生物在其生命的某个阶段都面临着被捕食者捕食或被寄生虫感染的风险。为了描述和量化抗捕食者和抗寄生虫的反应,人们提出了诸如恐惧景观(风险感知)和非消耗性效应(没有捕食或感染的代价高昂的反应)等理论概念。猎物/宿主物种如何识别和应对这些风险决定了它们的生存、繁殖成功,最终决定了它们的适应性。迄今为止,大多数研究都集中在捕食者-猎物或寄生虫-宿主相互作用上,但栖息地和生态系统中同时包含寄生和/或捕食性物种,它们构成了一个复杂而多样的风险因素马赛克。在这里,我们通过实验研究了一种嗜仙人掌的果蝇,黑带实蝇,暴露于一系列物种,包括寄生虫(外寄生螨虫)、捕食者(跳跃蜘蛛)以及无害的异源种(非寄生螨虫、蚂蚁和象鼻虫)。我们证明,黑带实蝇能够区分威胁和非威胁物种,在寄生虫存在的情况下增加不规则运动并降低速度,但在捕食者存在的情况下减少不规则运动和梳理时间。特别重要的是,苍蝇能够区分同种寄生雌螨和非寄生雄螨,并做出相应的反应。我们还表明,当暴露于寄生螨虫(即感染风险)和蜘蛛(即捕食风险)时,这些非消耗性效应的方向不同。鉴于捕食和感染风险对飞行行为的相反影响,我们讨论了寄生虫和捕食者回避行为之间的潜在权衡。我们的发现说明了在恐惧景观中进行风险评估的复杂性,以及由此产生的精细的非消耗性效应。此外,这项研究首次在陆地系统中研究了这些行为非消耗性效应。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验