| Literature DB >> 28877259 |
Elvira Fatsini1, Sonia Rey2, Zohar Ibarra-Zatarain1,3, Simon Mackenzie2, Neil J Duncan1.
Abstract
Dominance is defined as the preferential access to limited resources. The present study aimed to characterise dominance in a non-aggressive flatfish species, the Senegalese sole (Solea senegalensis) by 1) identifying dominance categories and associated behaviours and 2) linking dominance categories (dominant and subordinate) with the abundance of selected mRNA transcripts in the brain. Early juveniles (n = 74, 37 pairs) were subjected to a dyadic dominance test, related to feeding, and once behavioural phenotypes had been described the abundance of ten selected mRNAs related to dominance and aggressiveness was measured in the brain. Late juveniles were subjected to two dyadic dominance tests (n = 34, 17 pairs), related to feeding and territoriality and one group test (n = 24, 4 groups of 6 fish). Sole feeding first were categorized as dominant and sole feeding second or not feeding as subordinate. Three social behaviours (i. "Resting the head" on another fish, ii. "Approaching" another fish, iii. "Swimming above another" fish) were associated with dominance of feeding. Two other variables (i. Total time occupying the preferred area during the last 2 hours of the 24 h test, ii. Organisms occupying the preferred area when the test ended) were representative of dominance in the place preference test. In all tests, dominant fish compared to subordinate fish displayed a significantly higher number of the behaviours "Rest the head" and "Approaches". Moreover, dominant sole dominated the sand at the end of the test, and in the group test dominated the area close to the feed delivery point before feed was delivered. The mRNA abundance of the selected mRNAs related to neurogenesis (nrd2) and neuroplasticity (c-fos) in dominant sole compared to subordinate were significantly different. This is the first study to characterise dominance categories with associated behaviours and mRNA abundance in Senegalese sole and provides tools to study dominance related problems in feeding and reproduction in aquaculture.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28877259 PMCID: PMC5587333 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Experimental chronogram of the different test conducted in Senegalese sole juveniles.
Experimental chronogram of the different dominance behavioural tests conducted on late Senegalese sole juveniles.
Ethogram of different behaviours registered in Senegalese sole.
| Behaviours, parameters and Index | Acronym | Test | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Approaches | 1 | A fish approaches another fish without making physical contact. | |
| Swimming above another | SAA | 1 | A fish swims near and above another fish. |
| Rest the head | RTH | 1 | A fish rests the head on another fish. This behaviour is performed resting the head on different parts of the body. |
| Displacement | 1 | A fish displaces another fish making contact, for example, swimming directly towards the another fish to make direct contact. | |
| Burying | 1 | A fish makes a wave type movement of the body and lateral fins starting from the head to the tail that in substrate would bury the animal. This behaviour has been associated with fear or escape, burying to rest and to reject other fish. | |
| Feeding | 1 | A fish eats the pellets provided registered as “Yes” or “No”. | |
| Initial time or latency | Ti | 2 | The total time that each fish remains in the preferred area (sand) during the first 2 hours (minutes) of the experiment. |
| Total time | TT | 2 | The total time of each animal remains in the sand during the 24 hours test (minutes) |
| Final time | Tf | 2 | The total time that each fish remains in the preferred area (sand) during the last 2 hours (minutes) of the test. |
| Order position | 2 | Order that the fish were observed in the preferred sand area at the beginning and end of the experiment, “First” was the animal which entered the sand first. “last” was the animal in the sand when the test finished after 24 hours. The same fish could have both positions. | |
| Feeding order | 3 | Order which fish ate in the group test. Fish that ate first was 1, second fish to eat was 2 etc. | |
| Rest the head index | RTH Index | 3 | The number of times that a fish rests the head on another fish minus the number of times other fish rested the head on the fish under consideration. |
| Swimming above another index | SAA Index | 3 | The number of times that a fish swims closely above another fish minus the number of times other fish swam above the fish under consideration. |
| Position “before feeding” index | POSITB Index | 3 | Index per fish per day = (( |
| Position “after feeding” index | POSITA Index | 3 | Index per fish per day = (( |
| Feeding index | 3 | The mean of the feeding order registered each of the 4 days for each individual. |
Ethogram of the different behaviours, parameters and index registered (each different behaviour performed were counted and registered) for the three dominance tests performed (feeding response, place preference test and group test).
Primers used in this study as possible dominance biomarkers for early Senegalese sole juveniles.
| Gene | Gene name | Amplicon size | Accession Number | Primer (5' 3') |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 175 | unigene4094 | |||
| 154 | unigene54354 | |||
| 396 | unigene1444 | |||
| 165 | unigene42532 | |||
| 187 | unigene55326 | |||
| 180 | unigene35339 | |||
| 153 | unigene17371 | |||
| 218 | unigene62116 | |||
| 166 | unigene3332 | |||
| 204 | unigene4626 | |||
Gene, gene name, size accession number (SoleaDBv4.1) and primer sequence are indicated.
Fig 2Frequency of the behaviours analysed in early and late juveniles of Senegalese sole.
Number of movements were counted during the 2-hour test that dominant and subordinate (A) early juveniles and (B) late juveniles Senegalese sole exhibited the three behaviours “Approaches”, “Swimming above another” (SAA) and “Rest the head” (RTH). Data was shown in Mean ± SEM (n = 74 early juveniles; n = 34 late juveniles). An * indicates a significant difference (P < 0.05).
Fig 3Place preference test in late juvenile sole (n = 74).
(A) Time in minutes during the last two hours of the test that dominant and subordinate Senegalese sole were in the preferred sand area (Tf). (B) The proportion of dominant and subordinate fish that were in the preferred sand area when the test finished (last). An * indicates a significant difference (P < 0.05).
Fig 4Mean behavioural indices for dominant (n = 12) and subordinate (n = 12) late juveniles sole in the group-test according to Kendall’s concordance coefficient.
(A) “Rest the head Index” (RTH Index); (B) “Swimming above another Index” (SAA Index) and (C) “Position before feeding” (POSITB Index). An * indicates a significant difference (P < 0.05).
mRNA abundance in Log (var + 1) fold difference for the several mRNAs analysed in dominant (n = 15) and subordinate (n = 15) early juvenile Senegalese sole.
| Log ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Genes | Dominant | Subordinate | p-value |
| 0.3506 ± 0.02955 | 0.3394 ± 0.03255 | 0.8005 | |
| 0.1787 ± 0.02148 a | 0.2548 ± 0.03255 b | 0.0410* | |
| 0.3305 ± 0.03719 | 0.3440 ± 0.03775 | 0.7950 | |
| 0.2052 ± 0.01116 | 0.2481 ± 0.01850 | 0.0592 | |
| 0.2614 ± 0.02190 | 0.2884 ± 0.03130 | 0.4860 | |
| 0.1753 ± 0.01933 | 0.1825 ± 0.01596 | 0.7760 | |
| 0.3759 ± 0.07202 | 0.3270 ± 0.07368 | 0.6388 | |
| 0.2884 ± 0.02222 | 0.2981 ± 0.03550 | 0.8180 | |
| 0.1465 ± 0.02297 a | 0.2132 ± 0.02745 b | 0.0471* | |
| 0.2070 ± 0.01213 | 0.2607 ± 0.02284 | 0.1261 | |
Data was shown mean ± SEM.
An * and different letters indicate a significant difference (P < 0.05) in mRNA abundance between dominant and subordinate sole. Means less than the pooled control population value of 0.3 were considered down-regulated.
Fig 5mRNA abundance of dominant (n = 15) and subordinate (n = 15) early juvenile sole.
Expression for two genes (A) c-fos and (B) nrd2 shown as mean ± SEM in Log (var + 1) transformation. Dashed line at 0.3 indicates the value of a pooled control simulating the population; values under 0.3 indicate down-regulation. An * denotes a significant difference (P < 0.05).