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Effects of predation pressure on the cognitive ability of the poeciliid Brachyraphis episcopi
Author(s) -
Culum Brown,
Victoria A. Braithwaite
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
behavioral ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.162
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1465-7279
pISSN - 1045-2249
DOI - 10.1093/beheco/ari016
Subject(s) - predation , biology , foraging , intraspecific competition , ecology , predator , boldness , competition (biology) , cottus , replicate , forage fish , habitat , personality , psychology , social psychology , statistics , mathematics
Variable levels of predation pressure are known to have significant impacts on the evolutionary ecology of different populations and can affect life-history traits, behavior, and morphology. To date, no studies have directly investigated the impact of predation pressure on cognitive ability. Here we use a system of replicate rivers, each with sites of high- and low-predation pressure, to investigate how this ecological variable affects learning ability in a tropical poeciliid, Brachyraphis episcopi. We used a spatial task to assess the cognitive ability of eight populations from four independent streams (four high- and four low-predation populations). The fish were required to locate a foraging patch in one of four compartments by utilizing spatial cues. Fish from areas of low-predation pressure had shorter foraging latencies, entered fewer compartments before discovering the reward patch and navigated more actively within the maze, than fish from high-predation sites. The difference in performance is discussed with reference to forage patch predictability, inter- and intraspecific foraging competition, geographic variation in predation pressure, boldness--shyness traits, and brain lateralization. Copyright 2005.Brachyraphis episcopi; cognition; evolution; poeciliids; predators; prey

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