Costs and limits of dosage response to predation risk: to what extent can tadpoles invest in anti-predator morphology?

被引:0
作者
Céline Teplitsky
Sandrine Plénet
Pierre Joly
机构
[1] Université Claude Bernard Lyon1,UMR CNRS 5023 Ecology of Fluvial Hydrosystems, Bât Darwin C
[2] Biology Evolutionary Biology Center,Departement of Population
来源
Oecologia | 2005年 / 145卷
关键词
Inducible defences; Morphology; Phenotypic plasticity;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Inducible defences have long been considered as a polyphenism opposing defended and undefended morphs. However, in nature, preys are exposed to various levels of predation risk and scale their investment in defence to actual predation risk. Still, among the traits that are involved in the defence, some are specific to one predator type while others act as a more generalised defence. The existence of defence costs could prevent an individual investing in all these traits simultaneously. In this study, we investigate the impact of an increasing level of predator density (stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus) on the expression of morphological inducible defences in tadpoles of Rana dalmatina. In this species, investment in tail length and tail muscle is a stickleback-specific response while increased tail fin depth is a more general defence. As expected, we found a relationship between investment in defence and level of risk through the responses of tail fin depth and tail length. We also found an exponential increase of defence cost, notably expressed by convex decrease of growth and developmental rates. We found a relative independence of investment in the different traits that compose the defence, revealing a high potential for fine tuning the expression of defended phenotypes with respect to local ecological conditions.
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页码:364 / 370
页数:6
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