4.5 Article

Acoustic and visual stimuli combined promote stronger responses to aerial predation in fish

Journal

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 6, Pages 1094-1102

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/beheco/arab043

Keywords

bird predation; multisensory integration; predation risk; sensory cues; startle response

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [BI 1828/3-1, RO 4766/2-1, EXC 2002/1, 390523135]
  2. Open Access Publication Fund of the Humboldt-Universita zu Berlin
  3. Elsa-NeumannScholarship des Landes Berlin

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Bird predation exerts strong selection pressure on fish, prompting them to distinguish between non-threatening and dangerous events using visual and acoustic cues. Fish demonstrate an optimal strategy by initiating diving in response to both cues simultaneously to save energy for future attacks.
Bird predation poses a strong selection pressure on fish. Since birds must enter the water to catch fish, a combination of visual and mechano-acoustic cues (multimodal) characterize an immediate attack, while single cues (unimodal) may represent less dangerous disturbances. We investigated whether fish could use this information to distinguish between non-threatening and dangerous events and adjust their antipredator response to the perceived level of risk. To do so, we investigated the antipredator behavior of the sulphur molly (Poecilia sulphuraria), a small freshwater fish which is almost exclusively preyed on by piscivorous birds in its endemic sulfide spring habitat. In a field survey, we confirmed that these fish frequently have to distinguish between disturbances stemming from attacking birds (multimodal) and those which pose no (immediate) threat such as bird overflights (unimodal). In a laboratory experiment, we then exposed fish to artificial visual and/or acoustic stimuli presented separately or combined. Sensitivity was high regardless of stimulus type and number (more than 96% of fish initiated diving), but fish dove deeper, faster, and for longer when both stimuli were available simultaneously. Based on the system's high rates of bird activity, we argue that such an unselective dive initiation with subsequent fine-tuning of diving parameters in accordance to cue modality represents an optimal strategy for these fish to save energy necessary to respond to future attacks. Ultimately, our study shows that fish anticipate the imminent risk posed by disturbances linked to bird predation through integrating information from both visual and acoustic cues.

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