Heckwolf M J, Gismann J, González-Santoro M, Coulmance F, Fuß J, McMillan W O, Puebla O
Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Research (ZMT), Bremen, Germany.
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI), Panama, Republic of Panama.
Mol Ecol. 2025 Jun;34(11):e17748. doi: 10.1111/mec.17748. Epub 2025 Apr 29.
Camouflage is a critical survival strategy that helps to evade predation and increase hunting success. Background matching and disruptive colouration are different camouflage strategies that are subject to different selective pressures and can drive divergence in their associated traits such as colour pattern and behaviour. This study tested whether two closely related reef fish species (Hypoplectrus spp.) with distinct colour patterns exhibit different predator escape responses and differential gene expression in the brain indicative of divergent camouflage strategies. Combining field and laboratory experiments, we show that barred hamlets, characterised by disruptive colouration, are dynamic in their escape responses, while black hamlets, with their darker colouration, had a preference for hiding. The behavioural differences between these species seem to be limited to divergent predator escape responses since other behaviours such as activity or sociability did not differ. Importantly, the observed behavioural differences were accompanied by transcriptomic differences in their brains, particularly in regions associated with the perception of looming threats and less so in the region involved in conditioning. Differential expression in the diencephalon suggests enhanced neuronal plasticity in barred hamlets, which might allow for rapid adjustments in their escape response, while black hamlets exhibited upregulation in genes linked to immune response and oxygen transport in the optic tectum. Overall, our findings suggest that the two species utilise different camouflage strategies, which might contribute to the maintenance of colour pattern differences and thereby influence the speciation and diversification of these closely related sympatric reef fishes.
伪装是一种关键的生存策略,有助于躲避捕食并提高狩猎成功率。背景匹配和扰乱性色彩是不同的伪装策略,它们受到不同的选择压力,并可能导致其相关特征(如颜色图案和行为)的分化。本研究测试了两种具有不同颜色图案的近缘珊瑚礁鱼类(Hypoplectrus spp.)是否表现出不同的捕食者逃避反应以及大脑中表明不同伪装策略的差异基因表达。结合野外和实验室实验,我们发现以扰乱性色彩为特征的条纹海鲈在逃避反应中表现出动态变化,而颜色较深的黑色海鲈则更喜欢隐藏。这些物种之间的行为差异似乎仅限于不同的捕食者逃避反应,因为其他行为(如活动或社交性)并无差异。重要的是,观察到的行为差异伴随着它们大脑中的转录组差异,特别是在与感知迫近威胁相关的区域,而在与条件作用相关的区域差异较小。间脑中的差异表达表明条纹海鲈的神经元可塑性增强,这可能使其逃避反应能够快速调整,而黑色海鲈在视顶盖中与免疫反应和氧气运输相关的基因上调。总体而言,我们的研究结果表明这两个物种利用不同的伪装策略,这可能有助于维持颜色图案差异,从而影响这些近缘同域珊瑚礁鱼类的物种形成和多样化。