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Extreme habitats are not refuges: poeciliids suffer from increased aerial predation risk in sulphidic southern Mexican habitats
Authors:RÜDIGER RIESCH  ALEXANDRA ORANTH  JUSTINA DZIENKO  NORA KARAU  ANGELA SCHIEßL  STEFAN STADLER  ADRIANA WIGH  CLAUDIA ZIMMER  LENIN ARIAS‐RODRIGUEZ  INGO SCHLUPP  MARTIN PLATH
Institution:1. University of Oklahoma, Department of Zoology, 730 Van Vleet Oval, Norman, OK 73019, USA;2. J.W.‐Goethe University of Frankfurt, Department of Ecology and Evolution, Siesmayerstrasse 70a, 60054 Frankfurt am Main, Germany;3. División Académica de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco (UJAT), C.P. 86150, Villahermosa, Tabasco, México
Abstract:Extreme environments are often considered a predation refuge for organisms living in them. In southern Mexico several species of poeciliid fishes are undergoing incipient speciation in a variety of extreme (i.e. permanently dark and/or sulphidic) freshwater systems, and previous research has demonstrated reproductive isolation between populations from sulphidic and adjacent benign habitats. In the present study, we investigated bird predation rates (measured as successful captures per minute) in two sulphidic surface and several benign surface habitats, to test the hypothesis that extreme habitats are predation refuges. We found capture rates to be approximately 20 times higher in sulphidic environments: probably facilitated by extremophile poeciliids spending most of their time at the water surface, where they engage in aquatic surface respiration as a direct response to hypoxia. Even birds that are usually not considered major fish predators regularly engage in fish predation in the toxic habitats of southern Mexico. Our results demonstrate that extreme environments do not necessarily represent a refuge from predation, and we discuss the general importance of predation in driving incipient speciation in these systems. Finally, we hypothesize that natural selection via avian predation may play an important role in maintaining reproductive isolation between divergent poeciliid populations. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 101 , 417–426.
Keywords:avian predation  divergent natural selection  ecological speciation  Egretta thula  extremophile fish  hydrogen sulphide  refuge hypothesis
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