Data

Data for: McCormick MI, Ferrari MCO, Fakan E, Barry RP, Chivers DP (2018) Diet cues and their utility for risk assessment in degraded habitats

James Cook University
McCormick, M
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.25903/5b7ba53be6fac&rft.title=Data for: McCormick MI, Ferrari MCO, Fakan E, Barry RP, Chivers DP (2018) Diet cues and their utility for risk assessment in degraded habitats &rft.identifier=10.25903/5b7ba53be6fac&rft.publisher=James Cook University&rft.description=Data from two field experiments that together represent one manuscript (submitted 2018)Abstract [Related Publication]: Habitat degradation can alter community processes by changing the cues available to assess risk. Modifications to the composition of the benthic environment have been found to alter the chemical background through which chemical information passes. The change in coral reefs from live coral to algal-dominated seascapes has been shown to prevent some fish species from using chemical alarm cues to inform their risk of predation, although not all species are affected. Here, we examined whether chemically-mediated dietary information from predators can be used to label novel predators as a threat, whether their efficacy is modified by habitat degradation, and whether cues from prey species not affected by the change in chemistry associated with habitat degradation can be used to mitigate the problem. Laboratory and field experiments showed that Ambon damselfish, Pomacentrus amboinensis, were able to learn the identity of individual novel predators from a cocktail of 3 predators using digestive products when the predators had been fed conspecifics of the prey species in the presence of water that had passed over live hard coral. This allows the labelling of predator identity to be greatly extended beyond the immediate capture and ingestion event. Fish that had the same learning opportunity in degraded water took more risk and died faster on habitat patches in the field. Ambon damselfish respond to chemical alarm cues from closely-related heterospecific P. nagasakiensis, both in live or degraded water, yet we failed to find behavioural evidence that they can use the congeneric diet odours to label predators. However, we did find a modest survival benefit under natural conditions, suggesting some limited learning occurred. Further work is necessary to investigate the role of chemical information redundancy among community members, as they provide insights into potential resilience mechanisms available to individuals facing environmental change.Description [Key included in dataset]: Juvenile Pomacentrus amboinensis exposed to water from tanks that contained faeces of predators (combined moonwrasse, dottybacks, lizardfish predators) that has been fed P.amboinensis or P.nagakakiensis (congeneric) in water that has passed over Live or Dead-degraded Pocillopora damicornis hard coral in a header tank. Data is the behaviour and space use of lab conditioned P.amboinensis on patch reefs (Exp 2), and how these fish then respond to the odour of dottybacks (fed squid to avoid diet cues) that were delivered via a tube and syringe in the field (Exp 1).Data consists of a spreadsheet with three sheets: a description and data for each of the two experiments; and a short video.The full methodology is available in the publication shown in the Related Publications link below.&rft.creator=McCormick, M &rft.date=2018&rft.relation=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2019.04.005&rft.coverage=145.44512301235,-14.679058462535 145.44545364582,-14.678586986941 145.4456174873,-14.67803974909 145.44559849882,-14.67747031608 145.44539853913,-14.676934428026 145.44503718166,-14.676484541808 145.4445497986,-14.676164696069 145.44398409841,-14.676006200156 145.44339545575,-14.67602456911 145.44284149108,-14.676218004806 145.44237643031,-14.676567571985 145.44204579684,-14.677039051933 145.44188195536,-14.677586292287 145.44190094384,-14.678155724995 145.44210090353,-14.678691610057 145.442462261,-14.679141491736 145.44294964406,-14.679461333122 145.44351534425,-14.679619826531 145.44410398691,-14.67960145788 145.44465795158,-14.679408025176 145.44512301235,-14.679058462535&rft.coverage=Lizard Island, northern Great Barrier Reef, Queensland, Australia&rft_rights=&rft_rights=CC BY-NC 4.0: Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0&rft_subject=habitat degradation&rft_subject=coral reef fish&rft_subject=predator-prey&rft_subject=risk assessment&rft_subject=chemical alarm cue&rft_subject=coral bleaching&rft_subject=ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies&rft_subject=Behavioural Ecology&rft_subject=BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES&rft_subject=ECOLOGY&rft_subject=Global Effects of Climate Change and Variability (excl. Australia, New Zealand, Antarctica and the South Pacific) (excl. Social Impacts)&rft_subject=ENVIRONMENT&rft_subject=CLIMATE AND CLIMATE CHANGE&rft_subject=Marine Flora, Fauna and Biodiversity&rft_subject=FLORA, FAUNA AND BIODIVERSITY&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

Licence & Rights:

Non-Commercial Licence view details
CC-BY-NC

CC BY-NC 4.0: Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0

Access:

Open view details

Open: free access under license

Full description

Data from two field experiments that together represent one manuscript (submitted 2018)

Abstract [Related Publication]: Habitat degradation can alter community processes by changing the cues available to assess risk. Modifications to the composition of the benthic environment have been found to alter the chemical background through which chemical information passes. The change in coral reefs from live coral to algal-dominated seascapes has been shown to prevent some fish species from using chemical alarm cues to inform their risk of predation, although not all species are affected. Here, we examined whether chemically-mediated dietary information from predators can be used to label novel predators as a threat, whether their efficacy is modified by habitat degradation, and whether cues from prey species not affected by the change in chemistry associated with habitat degradation can be used to mitigate the problem. Laboratory and field experiments showed that Ambon damselfish, Pomacentrus amboinensis, were able to learn the identity of individual novel predators from a cocktail of 3 predators using digestive products when the predators had been fed conspecifics of the prey species in the presence of water that had passed over live hard coral. This allows the labelling of predator identity to be greatly extended beyond the immediate capture and ingestion event. Fish that had the same learning opportunity in degraded water took more risk and died faster on habitat patches in the field. Ambon damselfish respond to chemical alarm cues from closely-related heterospecific P. nagasakiensis, both in live or degraded water, yet we failed to find behavioural evidence that they can use the congeneric diet odours to label predators. However, we did find a modest survival benefit under natural conditions, suggesting some limited learning occurred. Further work is necessary to investigate the role of chemical information redundancy among community members, as they provide insights into potential resilience mechanisms available to individuals facing environmental change.

Description [Key included in dataset]: Juvenile Pomacentrus amboinensis exposed to water from tanks that contained faeces of predators (combined moonwrasse, dottybacks, lizardfish predators) that has been fed P.amboinensis or P.nagakakiensis (congeneric) in water that has passed over Live or Dead-degraded Pocillopora damicornis hard coral in a header tank. Data is the behaviour and space use of lab conditioned P.amboinensis on patch reefs (Exp 2), and how these fish then respond to the odour of dottybacks (fed squid to avoid diet cues) that were delivered via a tube and syringe in the field (Exp 1).

Data consists of a spreadsheet with three sheets: a description and data for each of the two experiments; and a short video.

The full methodology is available in the publication shown in the Related Publications link below.

Notes

This dataset is available as a spreadsheet in MS Excel (.xlsx) and Open Document formats (.ods) and a QuickTime video in MOV (.mov) format.

Created: 2018-08-21

Data time period: 31 10 2017 to 14 12 2017

This dataset is part of a larger collection

Click to explore relationships graph

145.44512,-14.67906 145.44545,-14.67859 145.44562,-14.67804 145.4456,-14.67747 145.4454,-14.67693 145.44504,-14.67648 145.44455,-14.67616 145.44398,-14.67601 145.4434,-14.67602 145.44284,-14.67622 145.44238,-14.67657 145.44205,-14.67704 145.44188,-14.67759 145.4419,-14.67816 145.4421,-14.67869 145.44246,-14.67914 145.44295,-14.67946 145.44352,-14.67962 145.4441,-14.6796 145.44466,-14.67941 145.44512,-14.67906

145.44374972133,-14.677813013343

text: Lizard Island, northern Great Barrier Reef, Queensland, Australia

Identifiers
  • Local : 7080b4b51437ed5ae7037d368e3e4df1
  • Local : https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/9c6d087ebb41f7dfeae0ec1a9d3c9864
  • DOI : 10.25903/5b7ba53be6fac