Dining dichotomy: aquatic and terrestrial prey capture behavior in the Himalayan newt Tylototriton verrucosus

Transitions between aquatic and terrestrial prey capture are challenging. Trophic shifts demand a high degree of behavioral flexibility to account for different physical circumstances between water and air to keep performance in both environments. The Himalayan newt, Tylototriton verrucosus, is most...

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Main Authors: Egon Heiss, Marie De Vylder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Company of Biologists 2016-10-01
Series:Biology Open
Subjects:
Online Access:http://bio.biologists.org/content/5/10/1500
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spelling doaj-40ce581315e54bfe93ded5b0880d2c5f2021-06-02T18:39:56ZengThe Company of BiologistsBiology Open2046-63902016-10-015101500150710.1242/bio.020925020925Dining dichotomy: aquatic and terrestrial prey capture behavior in the Himalayan newt Tylototriton verrucosusEgon Heiss0Marie De Vylder1 Istitute of Systematic Zoology and Evolutionary Biology, Friedrich-Schiller-University of Jena, Jena, Germany. Erbertstr, Jena 1 07743, Germany Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium. Universiteitplein 1, Antwerp B-2610, Belgium Transitions between aquatic and terrestrial prey capture are challenging. Trophic shifts demand a high degree of behavioral flexibility to account for different physical circumstances between water and air to keep performance in both environments. The Himalayan newt, Tylototriton verrucosus, is mostly terrestrial but becomes aquatic during its short breeding period. Nonetheless, it was assumed that it lacks the capability of trophic behavioral flexibility, only captures prey on land by its tongue (lingual prehension) and does not feed in water. This theory was challenged from stomach content analyses in wild populations that found a variety of aquatic invertebrates in the newts' stomachs during their breeding season. Accordingly, we hypothesized that T. verrucosus actively changes its terrestrial prey capture mechanism to hunt for aquatic prey at least during its aquatic stage. In fact, the kinematic analyses showed that T. verrucosus uses lingual prehension to capture prey on land but changes to suction feeding for aquatic strikes. The statistical analyses revealed that terrestrial and aquatic strikes differ significantly in most kinematic parameters while behavioral variability does not differ between both behaviors. In turn, the movement patterns in suction feeding showed a higher degree of coordination between jaw and hyoid movements compared to the putative primary feeding mode, namely lingual prehension. We conclude that T. verrucosus, though relatively slow compared to trophic specialists, benefits from a high degree of behavioral flexibility that allows exploiting food sources efficiently from two very different habitats.http://bio.biologists.org/content/5/10/1500AmphibiansFeedingKinematicsBehavioral flexibility
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Egon Heiss
Marie De Vylder
spellingShingle Egon Heiss
Marie De Vylder
Dining dichotomy: aquatic and terrestrial prey capture behavior in the Himalayan newt Tylototriton verrucosus
Biology Open
Amphibians
Feeding
Kinematics
Behavioral flexibility
author_facet Egon Heiss
Marie De Vylder
author_sort Egon Heiss
title Dining dichotomy: aquatic and terrestrial prey capture behavior in the Himalayan newt Tylototriton verrucosus
title_short Dining dichotomy: aquatic and terrestrial prey capture behavior in the Himalayan newt Tylototriton verrucosus
title_full Dining dichotomy: aquatic and terrestrial prey capture behavior in the Himalayan newt Tylototriton verrucosus
title_fullStr Dining dichotomy: aquatic and terrestrial prey capture behavior in the Himalayan newt Tylototriton verrucosus
title_full_unstemmed Dining dichotomy: aquatic and terrestrial prey capture behavior in the Himalayan newt Tylototriton verrucosus
title_sort dining dichotomy: aquatic and terrestrial prey capture behavior in the himalayan newt tylototriton verrucosus
publisher The Company of Biologists
series Biology Open
issn 2046-6390
publishDate 2016-10-01
description Transitions between aquatic and terrestrial prey capture are challenging. Trophic shifts demand a high degree of behavioral flexibility to account for different physical circumstances between water and air to keep performance in both environments. The Himalayan newt, Tylototriton verrucosus, is mostly terrestrial but becomes aquatic during its short breeding period. Nonetheless, it was assumed that it lacks the capability of trophic behavioral flexibility, only captures prey on land by its tongue (lingual prehension) and does not feed in water. This theory was challenged from stomach content analyses in wild populations that found a variety of aquatic invertebrates in the newts' stomachs during their breeding season. Accordingly, we hypothesized that T. verrucosus actively changes its terrestrial prey capture mechanism to hunt for aquatic prey at least during its aquatic stage. In fact, the kinematic analyses showed that T. verrucosus uses lingual prehension to capture prey on land but changes to suction feeding for aquatic strikes. The statistical analyses revealed that terrestrial and aquatic strikes differ significantly in most kinematic parameters while behavioral variability does not differ between both behaviors. In turn, the movement patterns in suction feeding showed a higher degree of coordination between jaw and hyoid movements compared to the putative primary feeding mode, namely lingual prehension. We conclude that T. verrucosus, though relatively slow compared to trophic specialists, benefits from a high degree of behavioral flexibility that allows exploiting food sources efficiently from two very different habitats.
topic Amphibians
Feeding
Kinematics
Behavioral flexibility
url http://bio.biologists.org/content/5/10/1500
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