Influence of ambient water coloration on habitat and conspecific choice in the female Lake Malawi cichlid, Metriaclima zebra  

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作  者:Noori Choj Nicolas Mathevon Eileen A.Hebets Marilyn Beauchaud 

机构地区:[1]School of Biological Sciences,University of Nebraska-Lincoln,Lincoln,NE,USA [2]ENES Bioacoustics Research Laboratory,CRNL,CNRS,Inserm,Universite de Saint-Etienne,Saint-Etienne,France [3]Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior,Konstanz,German

出  处:《Current Zoology》2024年第2期214-224,共11页动物学报(英文版)

摘  要:Female cichlid fish living in African great lakes are known to have sensory systems that are adapted to ambient light environments.These sen-sory system adaptations are hypothesized to have influenced the evolution of the diverse male nuptial coloration.In rock-dwelling Lake Malawi mbuna cichlids,however,the extent to which ambient light environments influence female sensory systems and potentially associated male nuptial coloration remains unknown.Yet,the ubiquitous blue flank coloration and UV reflection of male mbuna cichlids suggest the potential impacts of the blue-shifted ambient light environment on these cichlid's visual perception and male nuptial coloration in the shallow water depth in Lake Malawi.In the present study,we explored whether and how the sensory bias of females influences intersexual communication in the mbuna cichlid,Metriaclima zebra.A series of choice experiments in various light environments showed that M.zebra females (1)have a pref-erence for the blue-shifted light environment,(2)prefer to interact with males in blue-shifted light environments,(3)do not show a preference between dominant and subordinate males in full-spectrum,long-wavelength filtered,and short-wavelength filtered light environments,and (4)show a"reversed"preference for subordinate males in the UV-filtered light environment.These results suggest that the visual perception of M.zebra females may be biased to the ambient light spectra in their natural habitat by local adaptation and that this sensory bias may influence the evolution of blueand UV reflectivepatterns in male nuptial coloration.

关 键 词:ambient light environment Lake Malawi male coloration mbuna cichlids Metriaclima zebra sensory bias UV coloration UV perception visual communication. 

分 类 号:Q95[生物学—动物学]

 

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