Perceived risk of predation affects reproductive life-history traits in Gambusia holbrooki, but not in Heterandria formosa.

Key to predicting impacts of predation is understanding the mechanisms through which predators impact prey populations. While consumptive effects are well-known, non-consumptive predator effects (risk effects) are increasingly being recognized as important. Studies of risk effects, however, have foc...

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Main Authors: Shomen Mukherjee, Michael R Heithaus, Joel C Trexler, Jayanti Ray-Mukherjee, Jeremy Vaudo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3923821?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-98b759053b9049ea9e00a467947e0b9b2020-11-25T02:05:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0192e8883210.1371/journal.pone.0088832Perceived risk of predation affects reproductive life-history traits in Gambusia holbrooki, but not in Heterandria formosa.Shomen MukherjeeMichael R HeithausJoel C TrexlerJayanti Ray-MukherjeeJeremy VaudoKey to predicting impacts of predation is understanding the mechanisms through which predators impact prey populations. While consumptive effects are well-known, non-consumptive predator effects (risk effects) are increasingly being recognized as important. Studies of risk effects, however, have focused largely on how trade-offs between food and safety affect fitness. Less documented, and appreciated, is the potential for predator presence to directly suppress prey reproduction and affect life-history characteristics. For the first time, we tested the effects of visual predator cues on reproduction of two prey species with different reproductive modes, lecithotrophy (i.e. embryonic development primarily fueled by yolk) and matrotrophy (i.e. energy for embryonic development directly supplied by the mother to the embryo through a vascular connection). Predation risk suppressed reproduction in the lecithotrophic prey (Gambusia holbrokii) but not the matrotroph (Heterandria formosa). Predator stress caused G. holbrooki to reduce clutch size by 43%, and to produce larger and heavier offspring compared to control females. H. formosa, however, did not show any such difference. In G. holbrooki we also found a significantly high percentage (14%) of stillbirths in predator-exposed treatments compared to controls (2%). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first direct empirical evidence of predation stress affecting stillbirths in prey. Our results suggest that matrotrophy, superfetation (clutch overlap), or both decrease the sensitivity of mothers to environmental fluctuation in resource (food) and stress (predation risk) levels compared to lecithotrophy. These mechanisms should be considered both when modeling consequences of perceived risk of predation on prey-predator population dynamics and when seeking to understand the evolution of reproductive modes.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3923821?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shomen Mukherjee
Michael R Heithaus
Joel C Trexler
Jayanti Ray-Mukherjee
Jeremy Vaudo
spellingShingle Shomen Mukherjee
Michael R Heithaus
Joel C Trexler
Jayanti Ray-Mukherjee
Jeremy Vaudo
Perceived risk of predation affects reproductive life-history traits in Gambusia holbrooki, but not in Heterandria formosa.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Shomen Mukherjee
Michael R Heithaus
Joel C Trexler
Jayanti Ray-Mukherjee
Jeremy Vaudo
author_sort Shomen Mukherjee
title Perceived risk of predation affects reproductive life-history traits in Gambusia holbrooki, but not in Heterandria formosa.
title_short Perceived risk of predation affects reproductive life-history traits in Gambusia holbrooki, but not in Heterandria formosa.
title_full Perceived risk of predation affects reproductive life-history traits in Gambusia holbrooki, but not in Heterandria formosa.
title_fullStr Perceived risk of predation affects reproductive life-history traits in Gambusia holbrooki, but not in Heterandria formosa.
title_full_unstemmed Perceived risk of predation affects reproductive life-history traits in Gambusia holbrooki, but not in Heterandria formosa.
title_sort perceived risk of predation affects reproductive life-history traits in gambusia holbrooki, but not in heterandria formosa.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Key to predicting impacts of predation is understanding the mechanisms through which predators impact prey populations. While consumptive effects are well-known, non-consumptive predator effects (risk effects) are increasingly being recognized as important. Studies of risk effects, however, have focused largely on how trade-offs between food and safety affect fitness. Less documented, and appreciated, is the potential for predator presence to directly suppress prey reproduction and affect life-history characteristics. For the first time, we tested the effects of visual predator cues on reproduction of two prey species with different reproductive modes, lecithotrophy (i.e. embryonic development primarily fueled by yolk) and matrotrophy (i.e. energy for embryonic development directly supplied by the mother to the embryo through a vascular connection). Predation risk suppressed reproduction in the lecithotrophic prey (Gambusia holbrokii) but not the matrotroph (Heterandria formosa). Predator stress caused G. holbrooki to reduce clutch size by 43%, and to produce larger and heavier offspring compared to control females. H. formosa, however, did not show any such difference. In G. holbrooki we also found a significantly high percentage (14%) of stillbirths in predator-exposed treatments compared to controls (2%). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first direct empirical evidence of predation stress affecting stillbirths in prey. Our results suggest that matrotrophy, superfetation (clutch overlap), or both decrease the sensitivity of mothers to environmental fluctuation in resource (food) and stress (predation risk) levels compared to lecithotrophy. These mechanisms should be considered both when modeling consequences of perceived risk of predation on prey-predator population dynamics and when seeking to understand the evolution of reproductive modes.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3923821?pdf=render
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