AI Article Synopsis

  • Living in mixed-species groups helps animals with anti-predator defenses, forage efficiency, and movement, but it also increases competition and exposure to diseases.
  • Each species in these groups faces unique challenges based on their physical traits and environmental changes, particularly in areas like the Great Barrier Reef, which is affected by human activities.
  • The study shows that Ambon damselfish struggle to recognize their own chemical alarm signals in degraded habitats, but they can learn about predator threats by using alarm cues from the related whitetail damselfish, leading to better survival rates in mixed groups.

Article Abstract

Living in mix-species aggregations provides animals with substantive anti-predator, foraging and locomotory advantages while simultaneously exposing them to costs, including increased competition and pathogen exposure. Given each species possess unique morphology, competitive ability, parasite vulnerability and predator defences, we can surmise that each species in mixed groups will experience a unique set of trade-offs. In addition to this unique balance, each species must also contend with anthropogenic changes, a relatively new, and rapidly increasing phenomenon, that adds further complexity to any system. This complex balance of biotic and abiotic factors is on full display in the exceptionally diverse, yet anthropogenically degraded, Great Barrier Reef of Australia. One such example within this intricate ecosystem is the inability of some damselfish to utilize their own chemical alarm cues within degraded habitats, leaving them exposed to increased predation risk. These cues, which are released when the skin is damaged, warn nearby individuals of increased predation risk and act as a crucial associative learning tool. Normally, a single exposure of alarm cues paired with an unknown predator odour facilitates learning of that new odour as dangerous. Here, we show that Ambon damselfish, Pomacentrus amboinensis, a species with impaired alarm responses in degraded habitats, failed to learn a novel predator odour as risky when associated with chemical alarm cues. However, in the same degraded habitats, the same species learned to recognize a novel predator as risky when the predator odour was paired with alarm cues of the closely related, and co-occurring, whitetail damselfish, Pomacentrus chrysurus. The importance of this learning opportunity was underscored in a survival experiment which demonstrated that fish in degraded habitats trained with heterospecific alarm cues, had higher survival than those we tried to train with conspecific alarm cues. From these data, we conclude that redundancy in learning mechanisms among prey guild members may lead to increased stability in rapidly changing environments.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8481234PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-98224-0DOI Listing

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