Risk-sensitive resource defense in a territorial reef fish
Risk-sensitive resource defense in a territorial reef fish
As coral reefs are home to dense aggregations of a variety of species, aggressive territoriality is often a critical component of individual behavior. Identification and assessment of the risk posed by intruders is crucial to defending a territory, and fishes on coral reefs have been found to attend to body shape, body size, and coloration when responding to intruders. We examined the extent to which dusky damselfish (Stegastes adustus) discriminate among distinct categories of intruders by measuring the distance at which a fish attacks an intruder and the relative intensity and frequency of those attacks. We found that S. adustus discriminated among perceived threats, attacking conspecifics more intensely and more often than egg-predators and herbivores, and showing a trend of attacking those groups more often than invertebrate-feeders, which do not compete with damselfish for resources. Furthermore, territory holders attacked initial-phase wrasses from a farther distance than terminal-phase wrasses, suggesting that they can discriminate among classes of individuals within a species other than their own. Dusky damselfish thus exhibit the ability to make fine distinctions among intruders in a diverse ecosystem
Recognition, Territoriality, Aggression, Visual signals, Stegastes adustus, Dusky damselfish
813-819
Schacter, Carley R.
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Albright, Lindsey B.
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Dubofsky, Elizabeth A.
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Fitzsimmons, Jessica N.
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Focht, Rebecca
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Nadler, Lauren E.
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Sandercock, Maria
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Taylor, Lauren
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Walfoort, David
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Whitten, Torrey
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Williams, Lisa J.
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Rosenthal, Gil G.
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1 July 2014
Schacter, Carley R.
0429bff7-cbf7-4a91-a47a-aa5cab53e052
Albright, Lindsey B.
91f20750-a2a2-441b-ad72-b10ce40d7286
Dubofsky, Elizabeth A.
33b9b404-fa23-4699-a8d2-71e9d9b1e42f
Fitzsimmons, Jessica N.
0f0dda9d-71c8-4e05-91fe-0e5c5996a74a
Focht, Rebecca
d9022384-3330-4410-8d91-e8fbd902f5f2
Nadler, Lauren E.
1d1f8e6a-e951-41f5-888c-cfcb4b4b19dc
Sandercock, Maria
36671368-33fb-4dab-83ff-1e8b7f3a6eb3
Taylor, Lauren
5d3587d6-8468-492a-8c74-be50dc87a525
Walfoort, David
b41f71d2-9dcd-4b60-9a63-a3bf618a5af8
Whitten, Torrey
8999db98-6bc6-4f69-9844-407c1225583d
Williams, Lisa J.
b6f0389a-44e1-4120-885c-45e9e66c2daa
Rosenthal, Gil G.
f526ec2c-b641-4b6f-bf1a-cf0dae191843
Schacter, Carley R., Albright, Lindsey B., Dubofsky, Elizabeth A., Fitzsimmons, Jessica N., Focht, Rebecca, Nadler, Lauren E., Sandercock, Maria, Taylor, Lauren, Walfoort, David, Whitten, Torrey, Williams, Lisa J. and Rosenthal, Gil G.
(2014)
Risk-sensitive resource defense in a territorial reef fish.
Environmental Biology of Fishes, 97 (7), .
(doi:10.1007/s10641-013-0181-z).
Abstract
As coral reefs are home to dense aggregations of a variety of species, aggressive territoriality is often a critical component of individual behavior. Identification and assessment of the risk posed by intruders is crucial to defending a territory, and fishes on coral reefs have been found to attend to body shape, body size, and coloration when responding to intruders. We examined the extent to which dusky damselfish (Stegastes adustus) discriminate among distinct categories of intruders by measuring the distance at which a fish attacks an intruder and the relative intensity and frequency of those attacks. We found that S. adustus discriminated among perceived threats, attacking conspecifics more intensely and more often than egg-predators and herbivores, and showing a trend of attacking those groups more often than invertebrate-feeders, which do not compete with damselfish for resources. Furthermore, territory holders attacked initial-phase wrasses from a farther distance than terminal-phase wrasses, suggesting that they can discriminate among classes of individuals within a species other than their own. Dusky damselfish thus exhibit the ability to make fine distinctions among intruders in a diverse ecosystem
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 August 2013
Published date: 1 July 2014
Keywords:
Recognition, Territoriality, Aggression, Visual signals, Stegastes adustus, Dusky damselfish
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Local EPrints ID: 472574
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472574
ISSN: 0378-1909
PURE UUID: ba7a5844-8c8f-45e8-9b4f-fcc5b0f12064
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Date deposited: 08 Dec 2022 17:40
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:16
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Contributors
Author:
Carley R. Schacter
Author:
Lindsey B. Albright
Author:
Elizabeth A. Dubofsky
Author:
Jessica N. Fitzsimmons
Author:
Rebecca Focht
Author:
Lauren E. Nadler
Author:
Maria Sandercock
Author:
Lauren Taylor
Author:
David Walfoort
Author:
Torrey Whitten
Author:
Lisa J. Williams
Author:
Gil G. Rosenthal
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