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Behavioural and growth responses to the intensity of intraspecific social interaction among medaka, Oryzias latipes (Temminck and Schlegel) (Pisces, Cyprinodontidae)
Authors:D. E. Ruzzante   R. W. Doyle
Affiliation:Biology Department, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H4J1
Abstract:When access to food is restricted, faster growing fish may be those whose behaviour is relatively unaffected by the presence of nearby conspecifics. Behavioural experiments were carried out to determine the relation between growth and motor activity levels in crowded and uncrowded conditions, and measures of aversion/attraction to groups of conspecifics. Two experimental groups of Or)-ius laripes (Temminck and Schlegel) were grown for several weeks in two environments manipulated so as to maximize differences in social interactions. In the high interaction environment (HI), food was provided inside a floating cork ring. In the low interaction environment (LI), food was spread over the container's surface. Fish were measured at the end of the growth period and tested for their activity levels in the presence of conspecifics and for their preference for, or tolerance of crowded conditions. The correlation between motor activity and growth was significantly more positive in the HI environment than in the LI environment. The relationship between preference for crowded conditions and growth was negative for both groups of fish, although less so for HI than for LI. We conclude that artificial selection for faster growth may produce more aggressive fish only under very high levels of forced social interaction (competition), if at all. Under conditions of reduced social interaction, the social-aversive or socially indifferent fish grow faster.
Keywords:Oryzias latipes    intraspecific competition    growth    social tolerance    interaction    agonistic behaviour
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