AI Article Synopsis

  • Individuals need to adapt their behavior based on environmental factors like resources and threats from predators.
  • The study examines how eastern mosquitofish react collectively under different predation scenarios involving jade perch, highlighting unique behavioral patterns in response to varying threats.
  • Findings show that group behaviors are not just binary (threat or no threat) but are influenced by specific threat details, affecting how long groups stay together and how they interact.

Article Abstract

It is imperative for individuals to exhibit flexible behaviour according to ecological context, such as available resources or predation threat. Manipulative studies on responses to threat often focus on behaviour in the presence of a single indicator for the potential of predation, whereas in the wild perception of threat will probably be more nuanced. Here, we examine the collective behaviour of eastern mosquitofish () subject to five differing threat scenarios relating to the presence and hunger state of a jade perch (). Across threat scenarios, groups exhibit unique behavioural profiles that differ in the durations that particular collective states are maintained, the probability of transitions between states, the size and duration of persistence of spatially defined subgroups, and the patterns of collective order of these subgroups. Under the greatest level of threat, subgroups of consistent membership persist for longer durations. Group-level behaviours, and their differences, are interconnected with differences in estimates of the underlying rules of interaction thought to govern collective motion. The responses of the group are shown to be specific to the details of a potential threat, rather than a binary response to the presence or absence of some form of threat.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11296334PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.231511DOI Listing

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