| Literature DB >> 30816116 |
Lukas Landler1, James Skelton1,2, Michael S Painter1,3, Paul W Youmans1, Rachel Muheim4, Robert P Creed5, Bryan L Brown1, John B Phillips6.
Abstract
Magnetic sensing is used to structure every-day, non-migratory behaviours in many animals. We show that crayfish exhibit robust spontaneous magnetic alignment responses. These magnetic behaviours are altered by interactions with Branchiobdellidan worms, which are obligate ectosymbionts. Branchiobdellidan worms have previously been shown to have positive effects on host growth when present at moderate densities, and negative effects at relatively high densities. Here we show that crayfish with moderate densities of symbionts aligned bimodally along the magnetic northeast-southwest axis, similar to passive magnetic alignment responses observed across a range of stationary vertebrates. In contrast, crayfish with high symbiont densities failed to exhibit consistent alignment relative to the magnetic field. Crayfish without symbionts shifted exhibited quadramodal magnetic alignment and were more active. These behavioural changes suggest a change in the organization of spatial behaviour with increasing ectosymbiont densities. We propose that the increased activity and a switch to quadramodal magnetic alignment may be associated with the use of systematic search strategies. Such a strategy could increase contact-rates with conspecifics in order to replenish the beneficial ectosymbionts that only disperse between hosts during direct contact. Our results demonstrate that crayfish perceive and respond to magnetic fields, and that symbionts influence magnetically structured spatial behaviour of their hosts.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30816116 PMCID: PMC6395607 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-38404-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 3Activity analysis. Crayfish with moderate and high worm densities showed significantly lower activity than crayfish without any ectosymbionts (in the worm-density manipulation experiment).
Figure 1Magnetic alignment of crayfish. We tested spontaneous magnetic alignment behaviour of crayfish in a baseline assay without prior manipulation of ectosymbiont densities (A). We split the distribution of crayfish alignments based on symbiont densities above (high) and below (moderate) the median value of 5 worms (B). We also tested magnetic alignment behaviour of crayfish with manipulated worm densities at three treatment levels; no worms, moderate and high worm density (C). Baseline test demonstrated a significant magnetic alignment of crayfish to the magnetic NE/SW axis. Crayfish with moderate worm densities exhibited a bimodal distribution of alignments with respect to the magnetic field, whereas those with high worm densities were not magnetically aligned. Crayfish tested with three different ectosymbiont densities showed a quadramodal distribution of alignments when hosts were without worms ‘no worms’, a bimodal distribution of alignments when hosts had a moderate worm density, and a distribution of magnetic alignments that was indistinguishable from random when hosts had a high worm density. Significance of alignments was tested by the Rayleigh-test; p-value (p), sample size and the mean vector length (r) are given for each distribution. We compared distributions using the Watson U2-test; test statistic (U2) and p-values are shown above the arrows indicating the compared distributions. All p-values with an asterisk are alpha corrected, when tested for axial and bi-axial alignment. We calculated a 95% confidence interval around the mean direction confidence interval in case of significance.
Figure 2Variability in magnetic response as a function of symbiont density. Comparison of the relationship between variability of crayfish magnetic orientation (circular standard deviation of mean orientation among individuals) and the number of symbionts during the baseline study with natural symbiont density (red circles) and experimentally manipulated symbiont densities (grey circles). Variability in the distribution of responses to the magnetic field increased with increasing symbiont density in both the baseline and worm-density manipulation experiments. Variability in baseline data was calculated as the circular standard deviation of orientation direction across a moving window of twelve individuals sorted by increasing observed natural symbiont density. Mean number of symbionts is the average number of C. ingens observed on the moving window of twelve individuals. Variability for manipulated symbiont density is shown as the circular standard deviation for each treatment level. Error bars show 90% confidence interval based on bootstrapped values from 10,000 resamplings without replacement. Treatment levels were adjusted to reflect symbiont attrition prior to testing. The no-worm treatment is not shown; since condition was not observed during the un-manipulated baseline study and caused a shift to a different magnetic response (quadramodal).