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Multiple selection pressures influence Trinidadian guppy (Poecilia reticulata) antipredator behavior
Authors:Templeton, Christopher N.   Shriner, Walter M.
Affiliation:Department of Biology, Denison University, Granville, OH 43023, USA
Abstract:Animals alter their behavior to avoid a variety of differenttypes of predators. Trinidadian guppies (Poecilia reticulata)have been an important system for examining the evolution ofantipredator behavior because geographically isolated populationsexperience different amounts of aquatic predation. Althoughthe influence of aquatic predators has been well documented,selective pressures from other types of predators are less wellunderstood. We examined the response of wild-caught individualsfrom upstream and downstream populations to an aquatic predatorand a simulated aerial predator. As previously documented, fishfrom the downstream population responded more strongly to theaquatic predator than did fish from the upstream population,inspecting for longer periods of time. Guppies also exhibiteda strong behavioral response to the potential aerial predator.Although both populations displayed a similar magnitude of response,they differed in the specific behaviors used. Upstream fishtended to freeze on the tank bottom, whereas downstream fishtended to hide under shelter. Field observations suggest thatthese strategies are related to habitat features specific toeach site. The behaviors used against aerial predators differedsubstantially from the behaviors used against aquatic predators,suggesting that different types of predators exert conflictingselection pressures. This research demonstrates the importanceof considering multiple selection pressures acting on an organismwhen trying to understand the evolutionary history of behavioraland morphological traits.
Keywords:aerial predators   aquatic predators   fish   guppy.
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