4.5 Article

Thermal games in crayfish depend on establishment of social hierarchies

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 215, Issue 11, Pages 1892-1904

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.065946

Keywords

crayfish; dominance; agonistic behaviour; thermoregulation; resource; game theory; thermal game

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)

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An unequal resource distribution is commonly seen in dominance hierarchies, in which the individual with the higher status is more successful in obtaining the resource. One possible resource is preferred temperature. When situations allow, ectotherms regulate their body temperature by behaviourally selecting different environmental conditions, achieving, when possible, a preferred temperature. Using a shuttlebox, the preferred temperature for Procambarus clarkii was determined to be 23.9 degrees C with upper and lower voluntary escape temperatures of 25.9 and 21.8 degrees C, respectively. If this preferred temperature zone (21.8-25.9 degrees C) was valued as a resource, given the choice between a preferred temperature and a non-preferred temperature, crayfish should compete over the preferred temperature, with the dominant individual of dyadic pairs achieving the preferred temperature more often than the subordinate. Using a dual-choice experimental tank, competition over a binary temperature choice between rank-established paired crayfish was determined under both warm and cold challenge conditions (warm vs preferred temperature and cold vs preferred temperature, respectively). In naive pairings, similar levels of competition over the preferred temperature occurred in both warm and cold challenge trials, as predicted by game theory. In established pairings, however, dominant crayfish gained significantly greater access to preferred temperature in both warm and cold challenge conditions. These results demonstrate that crayfish engage in a cost-benefit assessment during their initial agonistic contests over temperature, but as hierarchies mature, these thermal games are decided by the dominant animal gaining primary access to the temperature resource.

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