4.5 Article

Variation along the shy-bold continuum in extremophile fishes (Poecilia mexicana, Poecilia sulphuraria)

Journal

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY
Volume 63, Issue 10, Pages 1515-1526

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00265-009-0780-z

Keywords

Boldness; Extremophiles; Hydrogen sulfide; Poeciliidae; Predator regimes

Funding

  1. Mexican Government (Permiso de Pesca de Fomento No. DGOPA) [06192.240608.-1562]
  2. Semarnat [SGPA/DGVS/04148/08, SGPA/DGVS/04751/08]
  3. Municipal of Tacotalpa [SM/1133/208]
  4. DFG [PL470/1-2]
  5. NSF [105095200]

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One potential trade-off that bold individuals face is between increased predation risks and gains in resources. Individuals experiencing high predation and hungry individuals (or individuals with low body condition) are predicted to show increased boldness. We examined one behavioral trait previously reported to be associated with boldness (the time individual fish needed to emerge from shelter) in various populations of mollies (Poecilia spp.). Our study system included several southern Mexican surface streams with high piscine predation and high food availability, sulfidic surface streams with high avian predation, in which the inhabiting fish show reduced body condition, and a sulfidic cave, where predation and body condition are low. Our comparison revealed very short times to emerge from the start box in populations from non-sulfidic streams. In sulfidic habitats (whether surface or cave), it took individual Poecilia mexicana considerably longer to emerge from the start box, and the same difference was also found in an independent comparison between P. mexicana and the closely related, highly sulfide-adapted Poecilia sulphuraria. Fish reared under common garden conditions (in the absence of predators and hydrogen sulfide) showed intermediate boldness scores to the extremes observed in the field. Our data thus indicate that (a) boldness is shaped by environmental conditions/experiential effects, but is not heritable, (b) predation affects boldness in the predicted direction, but (c) low body condition leads to reduced boldness. Extremophile Poecilia spp. spend most of their time surfacing to survive under sulfidic and hypoxic conditions, which exposes them to increased levels of predations, but the fish forage on the bottom. Hence, in this system, increased boldness does not increase foraging success. We argue that energy limitation favors reducing energetically costly behaviors, and exploring novel environments may be just one of them.

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