info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Signals from predators, injured conspecifics, and pesticide modify the swimming behavior of the gregarious tadpole Rhinella dorbignyi (anura: bufonidae)
Fecha
2021-08Registro en:
Curi, Lucila Marilén; Cuzziol Boccioni, Ana Paula; Peltzer, Paola; Attademo, Andres Maximiliano; Basso, Agustin; et al.; Signals from predators, injured conspecifics, and pesticide modify the swimming behavior of the gregarious tadpole Rhinella dorbignyi (anura: bufonidae); National Research Council Canada-NRC Research Press; Canadian Journal of Zoology; 100; 999; 8-2021; 19-27
0008-4301
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Curi, Lucila Marilén
Cuzziol Boccioni, Ana Paula
Peltzer, Paola
Attademo, Andres Maximiliano
Basso, Agustin
Leon, Evelina Jesica
Lajmanovich, Rafael Carlos
Resumen
Tadpoles detect chemical signals released from predators and conspecifics,aswellasthosepresentintheenvironment, and adjust their behavioral responses. This study evaluated the swimming activity of Dorbigny’s Toad(Rhinella dorbignyi (Duméril and Bibron, 1841)) tadpoles exposed to chemical signals, including cues from a predator fish, the marbled swamp eel (Synbranchus marmoratus Bloch, 1795), and an injured conspecific; sublethal concentration of insecticide cypermethrin; and their combination. Swimming behavior (total distance moved, mean speed, global activity, number of contacts between tadpoles) was evaluated in an individual (1) and groups of different size (3, 5, 7, and 10 tadpoles) using a video-tracking software tool. Predator exposure modified behavioral parameters, reducing encounters with predators and, therefore, mortality. Total distance moved and mean speed increased in trials involving 1 tadpole and 3 interacting tadpoles exposed to injured conspecifics, whereas global activity increased in all group sizes, showing that gregarious tadpoles may be affected by alarm cues and their behavior may be disrupted. The insecticide treatments (alone and combined) increased parameters in all group sizes, causing hyperactivity due to its neurotoxic effect. The different responses observed after exposure to alarm cues and environmental signals in the different group sizes modified the normal behavior and the ecological dynamics of gregarious tadpoles.