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Influence of proximal stimuli on swimming in the sea hare Aplysia brasiliana

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0022-0981(03)00019-4

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sea hare; Aplysia brasiliana; swimming

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Although the neurobiology and physiology of sea hares are extensively studied, comparatively little is known about their behaviour or ecology. Several species of sea hares swim, but the function of swimming is unclear. In this paper, we tested the hypotheses that swimming in Aplysia brasiliana serves to find food and mates, and to escape predators. Our data strongly support the hypothesis that swimming in A. brasiliana is related to feeding. Sea hares deprived of food overnight swam 12 times longer than ones that had been fed. When sea hares contacted food while swimming they invariably stopped, while those contacting a plastic algal mimic mostly continued to swim. Our experiments provided no evidence to support the hypothesis that swimming in sea hares is related to social behaviour. Sea hares deprived of copulatory mates for 3 days did not swim longer than ones held in copulating groups. Moreover, swimming sea hares never stopped swimming upon encountering a conspecific. Our experiments also supported the hypothesis that swimming in sea hares is related to predation. Sea hares stimulated with a standardised tail pinch and exposed to ink of conspecifics swam four times longer than control individuals, and tail-pinched sea hares that released ink swam five times longer than ones that did not release ink. However, because predators of adult sea hares are mostly lacking and because sea hares often swim spontaneously without predators being present, we conclude that swimming behaviour in A. brasiliana is primarily related to food-finding. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All fights reserved.

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