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Supplementary material from "Reversible morphological changes in a juvenile marine fish after exposure to predatory alarm cues"

Posted on 2020-05-07 - 09:31
Chemical cues from predators induce a range of predator-induced morphological defences (PIMDs) observed across fish taxa. However, the mechanisms, consistency, direction and adaptive value of PIMDs are still poorly studied. Here, we have tested if predatory cues can induce changes in the body shape of the juvenile marine fish Sparus aurata reared under controlled conditions without the presence of predators by exposing individuals to the olfactory stimulus of a fish predator. We tested our hypothesis using a nested replicated before-after-control-impact experiment, including recovery (potential reversibility) after the cessation of the predator stimulus. Differences in the size-independent body shape were explored using landmark-based geometric morphometrics and revealed that, on average, individuals exposed to a predatory cue presented deeper bodies and longer caudal regions, according to our adaptive theoretical predictions. These average plastic responses were reversible after withdrawal of the stimulus and individuals returned to average body shapes. We, therefore, provide evidence supporting innate reversible PIMDs in marine naïve fish reared under controlled conditions. The effects at the individual level, including fitness and the associated applied implications, deserve further research.

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AUTHORS (7)

Carlos Díaz-Gil
Josep Alós
Pablo Arechavala-Lopez
Miquel Palmer
Inmaculada Riera-Batle
Amalia Grau
Ignacio A. Catalán

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