Ineffective integration of multiple anti-predator defenses in a rotifer: a low-cost insurance?
Yuhan He,
Konghao Zhu,
Kangshun Zhao,
Liang He,
Ulrika Candolin,
Jun Xu and
Huan Zhang
Behavioral Ecology, 2023, vol. 34, issue 1, 117-124
Abstract:
To maximize survival, prey often integrates multiple anti-predator defenses. How the defenses interact to reduce predation risk is, however, poorly known. We used the rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus to investigate how morphological (spines) and behavioral (floating) defenses are integrated against a common predatory rotifer, Asplanchna brightwellii, and if their combined use improves survival. To this end, we assessed the cost of the behavioral defense and the efficiency of both defenses, individually and combined, as well as their mutual dependency. The results show that the behavioral defense is costly in reducing foraging activity, and that the two defenses are used simultaneously, with the presence of the morphological defense enhancing the use of the behavioral defense, as does the pre-exposure to predator cues. However, while the morphological defense reduces predation risk, the behavioral defense does not, thus, adding the costly behavioral defense to the morphological defense does not improve survival. It is likely that the cost of the behavioral defense is low given its reversibility—compared to the cost of misidentifying the predator species—and that this has promoted the adoption of both defenses, as general low-cost insurance rather than as a tailored strategy toward specific predators. Thus, the optimal strategy in the rotifer appears to be to express both morphological and behavioral defenses when confronted with the cues of a potential predator.
Keywords: behavioral defenses; morphological defenses; phenotypic plasticity; predator–prey interactions; predatory cues (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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