| Literature DB >> 26235428 |
Ralph Tollrian1, Sonja Duggen2, Linda C Weiss1, Christian Laforsch3, Michael Kopp4.
Abstract
Predation is a major factor driving evolution, and organisms have evolved adaptations increasing their survival chances. However, most defenses incur trade-offs between benefits and costs. Many organisms save costs by employing inducible defenses as responses to fluctuating predation risk. The level of defense often increases with predator densities. However, individual predation risk should not only depend on predator density but also on the density of conspecifics. If the predator has a saturating functional response one would predict a negative correlation between prey density and individual predation risk and hence defense expression. Here, we tested this hypothesis using six model systems, covering a taxonomic range from protozoa to rotifers and crustaceans. In all six systems, we found that the level of defense expression increased with predator density but decreased with prey density. In one of our systems, i.e. in Daphnia, we further show that the response to prey density is triggered by a chemical cue released by conspecifics and congeners. Our results indicate that organisms adjust the degree of defense to the acute predation risk, rather than merely to predators' densities. Our study suggests that density-dependent defense expression reflects accurate predation-risk assessment and is a general principle in many inducible-defense systems.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26235428 PMCID: PMC4522656 DOI: 10.1038/srep12736
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Expression of inducible defenses increases with predator density (kairomone concentration) and decreases with prey density.
The plots show treatment means ± SD of relative defense expression (trait value divided by body length) or, in Daphnia pulex, of a score of neckteeth formation. Two-way ANOVA results are significant for predator and prey effects in all systems (all p ≤ 0.001). In the Brachionus calyciflorus system, the prey density effect was tested only at a single predator density and analyzed with a Mann-Whitney U-test (p = 0.023).
Figure 2Nature and specificity of the cue for the prey-density effect in Daphnia lumholtzi.
(a) Information about prey density is transmitted via a chemical cue. Medium from conspecifics in a high density added to a low prey density reduced the induction to a level not significantly different from that in the high-density treatment (Tamhane pairwise comparison, p = 0.921). The low prey-density treatment differs significantly from both other treatments (Tamhane pairwise comparison, all p < 0.001). (b) The chemical cue is not species specific. One D. lumholtzi reared together with 9 D. magna reduced the defense induction to a level not significantly different from the high-density treatment (10 conspecifics, Tamhane pairwise comparison, p = 0.545). The low-density treatment differed significantly from both other treatments (Tamhane pairwise comparison, all p < 0.001). Shown are treatment means ± SD.