4.5 Article

Short-range hunters: exploring the function and constraints of water shooting in dwarf gouramis

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 224, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.243477

Keywords

Ballistic predation; Gourami; Shooting; Trichogaster lalius; Foraging adaptation

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Funding

  1. University of St Andrews

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Ballistic predation, a rare foraging adaptation in fishes, is exhibited by gouramis through shooting water to catch prey. Both male and female gouramis are capable of shooting, with differences observed in shooting performance based on target height. This behavior may have evolved convergently with archerfish and offers opportunities for comparative studies in the ecology and evolution of shooting in fishes.
Ballistic predation is a rare foraging adaptation: in fishes, most attention has focused on a single genus, the archerfish, known to manipulate water to shoot down prey above the water surface. However, several gourami species also exhibit apparently similar `shooting' behaviour, spitting water up to 5 cm above the surface. In a series of experiments, we explored the shooting behaviour and aspects of its significance as a foraging ability in the dwarf gourami (Trichogaster lalius). We investigated sex differences in shooting abilities to determine whether gourami shooting is related to the sexspecific bubble nest manufacture where males mix air and water at the surface to form bubbles. We found that, actually, both sexes were equally able to shoot and could learn to shoot a novel target. In a second experiment, we presented untrained gouramis with opportunities to shoot at live prey and found they successfully shot down both fruit flies and crickets. Finally, we explored the effect of target height on shooting performance to establish potential constraints of shooting as a foraging ability. The frequency of attempted shots and success of hitting targets decreased with height, whereas latency to shoot increased. We also observed that repeatable individual differences account for variation in these measures of shooting performance. Together, our results provide evidence that gourami shooting has a foraging function analogous to that of archerfish. Gourami shooting may serve as an example of convergent evolution and provide opportunities for comparative studies into the, as yet unexplored, ecology and evolution of shooting in fishes.

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