首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Cannibalism as an interacting phenotype: precannibalistic aggression is influenced by social partners in the endangered Socorro Isopod (Thermosphaeroma thermophilum)
Authors:B H Bleakley  S M Welter  K McCauley‐Cole  S M Shuster  A J Moore
Institution:1. Department of Biology, Stonehill College, , Easton, MA, 02357 USA;2. Department of Biology, Kansas Wesleyan University, , Salina, KS, 7401 USA;3. Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Arizona University, , Flagstaff, AZ, 86011 USA;4. Centre for Ecology and Conservation, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter Cornwall, , Penryn, Cornwall, UK;5. Department of Genetics, University of Georgia, , Athens, GA, 30602 USA
Abstract:Models for the evolution of cannibalism highlight the importance of asymmetries between individuals in initiating cannibalistic attacks. Studies may include measures of body size but typically group individuals into size/age classes or compare populations. Such broad comparisons may obscure the details of interactions that ultimately determine how socially contingent characteristics evolve. We propose that understanding cannibalism is facilitated by using an interacting phenotypes perspective that includes the influences of the phenotype of a social partner on the behaviour of a focal individual and focuses on variation in individual pairwise interactions. We investigated how relative body size, a composite trait between a focal individual and its social partner, and the sex of the partners influenced precannibalistic aggression in the endangered Socorro isopod, Thermosphaeroma thermophilum. We also investigated whether differences in mating interest among males and females influenced cannibalism in mixed sex pairs. We studied these questions in three populations that differ markedly in range of body size and opportunities for interactions among individuals. We found that relative body size influences the probability of and latency to attack. We observed differences in the likelihood of and latency to attack based on both an individual's sex and the sex of its partner but found no evidence of sexual conflict. The instigation of precannibalistic aggression in these isopods is therefore a property of both an individual and its social partner. Our results suggest that interacting phenotype models would be improved by incorporating a new conditional ψ, which describes the strength of a social partner's influence on focal behaviour.
Keywords:agonistic behaviour  indirect genetic effects  invertebrate conservation  psi (ψ  )  social selection
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号