AI Article Synopsis

  • Wildlife is facing increased risks from cancer-causing substances, which affects their behavior and population dynamics.
  • The study examined the effects of cadmium, a carcinogen, on wild planaria's activity over a 14-day period, divided into exposure and recovery phases.
  • Results showed that cadmium-exposed planaria were less active but eventually returned to pre-exposure activity levels, indicating that cancer risk factors can change behavioral patterns and highlight the need for advanced research in behavioral ecology.

Article Abstract

Wildlife is increasingly exposed to sublethal transient cancer risk factors, including mutagenic substances, which activates their anti-cancer defences, promotes tumourigenesis, and may negatively impact populations. Little is known about how exposure to cancer risk factors impacts the behaviour of wildlife. Here, we investigated the effects of a sublethal, short-term exposure to a carcinogen at environmentally relevant concentrations on the activity patterns of wild planaria during a two-phase experiment, consisting of a 7-day exposure to cadmium period followed by a 7-day recovery period. To comprehensively explore the effects of the exposure on activity patterns, we employed the double hierarchical generalized linear model framework which explicitly models residual intraindividual variability in addition to the mean and variance of the population. We found that exposed planaria were less active compared to unexposed individuals and were able to recover to pre-exposure activity levels albeit with a reduced variance in activity at the start of the recovery phase. Planaria showing high activity levels were less predictable with larger daily activity variations and higher residual variance. Thus, the shift in behavioural variability induced by an exposure to a cancer risk factor can be quantified using advanced tools from the field of behavioural ecology. This is required to understand how tumourous processes affect the ecology of species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10865010PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2023.2666DOI Listing

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