| Literature DB >> 24198950 |
Douglas P Chivers1, Danielle L Dixson, James R White, Mark I McCormick, Maud C O Ferrari.
Abstract
The use of chemical information in assessment of predation risk is pervasive across animal taxa. However, by its very nature, chemical information can be temporally unreliable. Chemical cues persist for some period of time after they are released into the environment. Yet, we know surprisingly little about the rate of degradation of chemical cues under natural conditions and hence little about how they function in temporal risk assessment under natural conditions. Here, we conducted an experiment to identify a concentration of fresh alarm cues that evoke a strong antipredator response in coral reef damselfish, Pomacentrus ambonensis. We then tested the rate at which these alarm cues degraded under natural conditions in ocean water, paying attention to whether the rate of degradation varied throughout the day and whether the temporal pattern correlated with physicochemical factors that could influence the rate of degradation. Fresh alarm cues released into ocean water evoke strong avoidance responses in juvenile fish, while those aged for 30 min no longer evoke antipredator responses. Fish exposed to cues aged for 10 or 20 min show intermediate avoidance responses. We found a marked temporal pattern of response throughout the day, with much faster degradation in early to mid-afternoon, the time of day when solar radiation, temperature, dissolved oxygen, and pH are nearing their peak. Ecologists have spent considerable effort elucidating the role of chemical information in mediating predator-prey interactions, yet we know almost nothing about the temporal dynamics of risk assessment using chemical information. We are in dire need of additional comparative field experiments on the rate of breakdown of chemical cues, particularly given that global change in UV radiation, temperature, and water chemistry could be altering the rates of degradation and the potential use of this information in risk assessment.Entities:
Keywords: Alarm cues; coral reefs; information use; predator–prey interactions; risk assessment.
Year: 2013 PMID: 24198950 PMCID: PMC3810885 DOI: 10.1002/ece3.760
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Evol ISSN: 2045-7758 Impact factor: 2.912
Figure 1Measurements of physiochemical parameters (temperature, pH, and dissolved oxygen) that were taken during the experiment. The PAR profile was from the exact same date 1 year later.
Figure 2Mean (±SE) proportion of time damselfish spent in the alarm cue arm of the flume when exposed to various concentrations of alarm cues in experiment 1 (n = 5/treatment).
Figure 3Mean (±SE) proportion of time damselfish spent in the alarm cue arm of the flume in experiment 2. Experiments were undertaken when the alarm cues had aged in ocean water for 0, 10, 20, or 30 min (n = 70–72 /degradation time).
Figure 4Proportion of time damselfish spent in the alarm cue arm of the flume at different times of day with cues that aged for different periods of time. Different color dots and lines correspond with cues that aged different periods of time. The darker the dots and lines, the longer the cues had aged. For cues that aged 10, 20, or 30 min, the relationship between avoidance and time of day was best described by a quadratic curve (n = 4/time of day/degradation time).
Figure 5Mean (±SE) proportion of time damselfish spent in the alarm cue arm of the flume when alarm cues were degraded for different periods of time (hours) in the laboratory (temperature: 25.8 C) (n = 6/degradation time).