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Sound the alarm: learned association of predation risk with novel auditory stimuli by fathead minnows ( Pimephales promelas ) and glowlight tetras ( Hemigrammus erythrozonus ) after single simultaneous pairings with conspecific chemical alarm cues
Authors:Brian D Wisenden  Julie Pogatshnik  Danfee Gibson  Lucia Bonacci  Adam Schumacher and Allison Willett
Institution:(1) Biosciences Department, Minnesota State University Moorhead, Moorhead, MN 56563, USA;(2) College of Biological Science, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, MN 55113, USA
Abstract:Fathead minnows, Pimephales promelas, and glowlight tetras, Hemigrammus erythrozonus, were tested for their ability to associate predation risk with novel auditory stimuli after auditory stimuli were presented simultaneously with chemical alarm cues. Minnows and tetras gave a fright response when exposed to skin extract (alarm cue) and an artificial auditory sound stimulus, but no response to water (control) and sound, indicating that they did not have a pre-existing aversion to the auditory stimulus. When retested with sound stimuli alone, minnows and glowlight tetras that had previously been conditioned with water and sound showed no response, but those that had been conditioned with alarm cues and sound exhibited antipredator behaviour (reduced activity) in response to the auditory cue. This is the first known demonstration of learned association of an auditory cue with predation risk, and raises questions about the role of sound in mediating predator-prey interactions in fishes.
Keywords:Chemical alarm cues  Sound  Acquired predator recognition  Learning  Fathead minnows  Glowlight tetras
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