Social learning of predators by coral reef fish: Does observer number influence acquisition of information?
journal contribution
posted on 2018-07-31, 00:00authored byRachel Manassa, MI McCormick, DL Dixson, MCO Ferrari, DP Chivers
Prey that are capable of continuously learning the
identity of new predators whilst adjusting the intensity of their
responses tomatch their level of risk, are often at a substantive
advantage. Learning about predators can occur through direct
experience or through social learning from experienced individuals.
Social learning provides individuals with an effective
means of acquiring information while reducing the costs
associated with direct learning. Under a natural setting, social
learning is likely to occur between more than two individuals.
As such, investigating the effect that group size has on the
ability of individuals to acquire information is vital to understanding
social learning dynamics. Given the characteristics of
coral reefs and the biology of coral reef fishes, these habitats
are an ideal medium to test whether group size affects the
transmission of information. Using newly settled damselfish
(Pomacentrus amboinensis), we examined whether the number
of observers present influences transmission of information.
We showed that: (1) predator recognition is socially
transmitted from predator-experienced to predator-naïve individuals
regardless of group size, and that (2) the level of
response displayed by the observer does not differ
following learning in different sized groups. Our study
highlights that information on predator identities is
able to be passed onto group members quickly without a dilution of information content.
Funding
Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)
James Cook University; Department of Agriculture, Science and Environment ; Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta; University of Saskatchewan, Canada