Lachlan RF, Crooks L, Laland KN
Sub-Department of Animal Behaviour, University of Cambridge
Anim Behav. 1998 Jul;56(1):181-90. doi: 10.1006/anbe.1998.0760.
Preferences of fish for different types of shoals may influence the transmission of novel information through them. We investigated the factors influencing the preferences of guppies, Poecilia reticulata, for different shoals in order to shed some light on how information transmission occurs. Adult subjects were given a choice between swimming with two diverging shoals of conspecifics that differed with respect to key characteristics. In six choice experiments, subjects discriminated between shoal partners on the basis of: (1) shoal size, subjects preferring a shoal of 10 to a single fish; (2) size of shoaling fish, small fish preferring small conspecifics rather than an equal number of large fish, while large fish showed no preference; (3) local foraging experience of shoaling fish, shoals containing fish that had previously been repeatedly fed in the experimental tank being preferred to shoals with no such experience; and (4) familiarity of shoaling fish, guppies preferring familiar rather than unfamiliar conspecifics. No discrimination on the basis of colour or hunger was observed. In addition, following a shoal to a food site on just three trials allowed guppies to learn a route, or food site, preference. Guppies were considerably more likely to learn to adopt the behaviour shown by members of a shoal of several demonstrators than an alternative behaviour shown by a single conspecific demonstrator. The relationship between preferences for different shoals and the social transmission of information is discussed in the light of these findings. The results suggest that shoaling preferences may strongly influence the social transmission of novel foraging information or feeding preferences through fish populations, and imply that learned infor-mation may diffuse through fish populations in a nonrandom, or directed, manner. Copyright 1998 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.
鱼类对不同类型鱼群的偏好可能会影响新信息在其中的传播。我们研究了影响孔雀鱼(Poecilia reticulata)对不同鱼群偏好的因素,以便深入了解信息是如何传播的。成年实验对象可在与两种关键特征不同的同物种分歧鱼群一起游动之间做出选择。在六个选择实验中,实验对象基于以下因素区分鱼群伙伴:(1)鱼群大小,实验对象更喜欢10条鱼的鱼群而非单条鱼;(2)群居鱼类的大小,小鱼更喜欢小的同物种鱼而非数量相等的大鱼,而大鱼没有偏好;(3)群居鱼类的本地觅食经验,包含此前在实验水箱中多次被投喂过的鱼的鱼群比没有这种经验的鱼群更受青睐;(4)群居鱼类的熟悉程度,孔雀鱼更喜欢熟悉的而非不熟悉的同物种鱼。未观察到基于颜色或饥饿程度的区分。此外,仅经过三次试验跟随鱼群到食物地点就能让孔雀鱼学会一条路线或食物地点偏好。与单个同物种示范者展示的另一种行为相比,孔雀鱼更有可能学会采用由几只示范者组成的鱼群成员所展示的行为。根据这些发现讨论了对不同鱼群的偏好与信息的社会传播之间的关系。结果表明,鱼群偏好可能会强烈影响新觅食信息或摄食偏好通过鱼群的社会传播,并意味着习得信息可能以非随机或定向的方式在鱼群中传播。版权所有1998年动物行为研究协会。