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Social Context Influences the Antipredator Behaviour of Fathead Minnows to Chemical Alarm Cues

Prey fishes, like many organisms under fluctuating predation threat, rely on multiple sources of information to accurately gauge current risk. This includes the use of chemical cues such as alarm cues from damaged conspecifics or familiar heterospecifics, as well as the odour of known predators. Whi...

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Published in:Ethology 2006-08, Vol.112 (8), p.801-806
Main Authors: Pollock, M. S., Pollock, R. J., Chivers, D. P.
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Language:English
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description Prey fishes, like many organisms under fluctuating predation threat, rely on multiple sources of information to accurately gauge current risk. This includes the use of chemical cues such as alarm cues from damaged conspecifics or familiar heterospecifics, as well as the odour of known predators. While each fish is well equipped with its own array of sensory abilities, they should also be alert to the behaviours of nearby neighbours who may have information they lack. In the present study, we tested the ability of fathead minnows to use social cues in combination with the odour of damaged conspecifics and heterospecifics to mediate the assessment of predation risk. Specifically, we tested whether the presence of a shoal of conspecifics or familiar heterospecifics would significantly change a minnow's antipredator behaviour when exposed to the odour of a damage‐release cue from a conspecific or ecologically similar heterospecific. The results of our study showed a significant interaction between the damage‐release cues to which the minnows were exposed and the presence/absence of shoalmates. These findings have important implications for the design of future investigations of antipredator responses because most studies of group‐living prey have been conducted on solitary subjects.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1439-0310.2006.01222.x
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subjects Agnatha and pisces
Animal behavior
Animal communication
Animal ethology
Biological and medical sciences
Fish
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Predation
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Risk assessment
Vertebrata
title Social Context Influences the Antipredator Behaviour of Fathead Minnows to Chemical Alarm Cues
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