Benefits, costs and reactivity of inducible defences: an experimental test with rotifers
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Aránguiz Acuña, Adriana
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Benefits, costs and reactivity of inducible defences: an experimental test with rotifers
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Abstract
1. A key aspect of the ecology and evolution of adaptive prey responses to predator risk is
the timing by which the former develop a defensive trait in response to inducing
signals released by the latter. This property, called reactivity, has been shown to affect
population stability and persistence.
2. Theoretically, the minimal predator density required by prey to exhibit induced
defences is expected to increase with the effectiveness of the defence and decrease with its
cost. Likewise, the time required for the prey population to exhibit an induced defence is
expected to increase together with cost.
3. The freshwater rotifers Brachionus calyciflorus and B. havanaensis and their predator
Asplanchna brightwelli were used to test the hypothesis that prey species exhibiting
defences that offer a larger fitness benefit and lower fitness cost are more reactive to
predator signals, in terms of requiring shorter exposure time and lower signal concentration
to trigger a morphological defence reaction.
4. Our results showed that both prey species exhibited costly and effective defences after
induction by predator infochemicals. Faster reactions were observed at higher levels of
predator cues. Nevertheless, the observed relationship between reactivity and benefit ⁄ cost
of defences did not agree with our expectations.
5. To our knowledge, this is the first study in which the timing of induction of
morphological defences is experimentally assessed over a gradient of risk signals. We
propose new research directions to disentangle the mechanisms and project the
consequences of prey decisions at the morphological level.
Patrocinador
AA-A acknowledges partial support from a CONICYT
doctoral scholarship, ICM–P05–002 grant to the
Institute of Ecology and Biodiversity, and a MECESUP
grant for foreign research stay. RR-J acknowledges
support from project FONDECYT 1090132. SSS
thanks support from CONACyT. The authors thank
logistic help provided by M.I. Olmedo at CENMA.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/119094
DOI: doi:10.1111/j.1365-2427.2010.02471.x
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Freshwater Biology (2010) 55, 2114–2122
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