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Cleaner shrimp are true cleaners of injured fish

journal contribution
posted on 2019-12-16, 00:00 authored by David VaughanDavid Vaughan, AS Grutter, HW Ferguson, R Jones, KS Hutson
Reef fishes sustain injuries from various behavioural and environmental interactions. Injured fishes have been observed frequenting cleaning stations to be attended by different cleaner fishes. This symbiotic relationship between injured fishes and cleaner fishes has only been observed in the wild and has never been demonstrated empirically for cleaner shrimp. We present the first investigation of cleaning of injured fish by cleaner shrimp, and the first controlled laboratory trial investi-gating the functional relationship between injured client fish and cleaners. We tested whether the cleaner shrimp (Lysmata amboinensis) cleaned injured sea goldies (Pseudanthias squamipinnis) following a standardised, unilateral superficial skin lesion. We recorded the cleaning behaviour between shrimp and fish and determined that the fish regulated the cleaning and reduced the amount of cleaning time by the shrimp of the injured side immediately post-injury, corresponding with previous literary evidence of the rapid onset of re-epithelialisation of the injury to seal it in the first 24 h in injured fishes. Thereafter, injured fish showed no cleaning preference between injured and uninjured sides. Image analyses determined that the cleaner shrimp reduced the redness of the injury, representing rubor, associated with the inflammatory response in fishes. Injuries in fishes are susceptible to invasion by secondary pathogens, and the reduction of injury rubor by shrimp may suggest that cleaning by these shrimp could reduce the success of opportunistic infection. Cleaner shrimp neither aggravated existing injury, nor created additional injury, measured quantitatively. The cleaning of injured fish by cleaner shrimp thus likely involves true cleaning behaviour.

Funding

Other

History

Volume

165

Issue

7

Start Page

1

End Page

12

Number of Pages

12

eISSN

1432-1793

ISSN

0025-3162

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC, Germany

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

St George’s University, Grenada; University of Queensland; James Cook University

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Marine Biology

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