Data

Data from: Nadler L, E., Killen S, S., McCormick MI. Hierarchical effects of flow-regime and social assortment on physiological differences among groups of a coral reef fish

James Cook University
Nadler, L
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:doi10.25903/5c4a754d43218&rft.title=Data from: Nadler L, E., Killen S, S., McCormick MI. Hierarchical effects of flow-regime and social assortment on physiological differences among groups of a coral reef fish &rft.identifier=10.25903/5c4a754d43218&rft.publisher=James Cook University&rft.description=This dataset is available as a spreadsheet in MS Excel (.xlsx) and Open Document formats (.ods)Abstract [Related Publication]: Group-living in animals carries a variety of trade-offs, with the exact benefit for any group member being largely dependent on the characteristics of its group-mates. For instance, similarity in locomotory performance aids in maintaining cohesion and synchronicity during collective movements while heterogeneity in behavioural phenotypes can aid in establishment of social hierarchies and individualized niches. However, no one has yet investigated whether animal groups sort according to physiological traits by means of phenotypic plasticity, selective mortality, and/or passive and active assortment. Here, we examined whether wild schools of the gregarious coral reef fish Chromis viridis display inter-group differences in whole-animal physiological traits and whether such variation is associated with local habitat characteristics (temperature, depth and flow rate). Using oxygen uptake (ṀO2) as a proxy for aerobic metabolic rate, we found significant differences in maximum metabolic rate (MMR, the upper constraint on an individual’s oxygen-consuming physiological activities) and aerobic scope (AS, capacity to support activities beyond basic maintenance) among schools from different sites, with both traits 11-13% higher in individuals collected on high-flow regime reefs. Minimum (i.e., standard) metabolic rate (SMR) was higher both at sites with shallower depths and on reefs with higher flow. In addition, among groups within sites, SMR often showed inter-school variance, suggesting groups may be assorting locally by SMR phenotype. Recent research examining intraspecific diversity has mainly focussed on differences among individuals, or among populations inhabiting different geographic regions. These results indicate that, in social species, phenotypic differences among groups may be influenced by a hierarchy of effects, with abiotic environmental characteristics affecting the distribution of metabolic traits generally and mechanisms of assortment driving the basal energy demand among social groups within a site.The dataset consists of an Excel datasheet containing location data and respirometry metabolism estimates for the damselfish Chromis viridis.The full methodology will be available from the Related Publications link below when the paper (submitted to the Journal of Fish Biology) is published. &rft.creator=Nadler, L &rft.date=2019&rft.coverage=145.46129032038,-14.69522246465 145.46341167813,-14.693898094394 145.46500611778,-14.692004435255 145.46591756447,-14.689726839799 145.46605679945,-14.687288246699 145.46541019343,-14.684927361097 145.46404104071,-14.682875288984 145.46208336349,-14.681332912627 145.45972879288,-14.680451222549 145.45720781063,-14.680316532954 145.45476718806,-14.680942029545 145.45264583031,-14.682266478302 145.45105139066,-14.684160221805 145.45013994397,-14.686437875265 145.45000070899,-14.688876477852 145.45064731501,-14.691237320801 145.45201646773,-14.693289314413 145.45397414494,-14.694831606406 145.45632871556,-14.69571323848 145.45884969781,-14.695847918588 145.46129032038,-14.69522246465&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=coral reef fish&rft_subject=respiratory physiology&rft_subject=current strength&rft_subject=metabolism&rft_subject=damselfish&rft_subject=ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies&rft_subject=Ecological Physiology&rft_subject=BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES&rft_subject=ECOLOGY&rft_subject=Expanding Knowledge in the Biological Sciences&rft_subject=EXPANDING KNOWLEDGE&rft_subject=EXPANDING KNOWLEDGE&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:

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Open: free access under license

Brief description

Abstract [Related Publication]: Group-living in animals carries a variety of trade-offs, with the exact benefit for any group member being largely dependent on the characteristics of its group-mates. For instance, similarity in locomotory performance aids in maintaining cohesion and synchronicity during collective movements while heterogeneity in behavioural phenotypes can aid in establishment of social hierarchies and individualized niches. However, no one has yet investigated whether animal groups sort according to physiological traits by means of phenotypic plasticity, selective mortality, and/or passive and active assortment. Here, we examined whether wild schools of the gregarious coral reef fish Chromis viridis display inter-group differences in whole-animal physiological traits and whether such variation is associated with local habitat characteristics (temperature, depth and flow rate). Using oxygen uptake (ṀO2) as a proxy for aerobic metabolic rate, we found significant differences in maximum metabolic rate (MMR, the upper constraint on an individual’s oxygen-consuming physiological activities) and aerobic scope (AS, capacity to support activities beyond basic maintenance) among schools from different sites, with both traits 11-13% higher in individuals collected on high-flow regime reefs. Minimum (i.e., standard) metabolic rate (SMR) was higher both at sites with shallower depths and on reefs with higher flow. In addition, among groups within sites, SMR often showed inter-school variance, suggesting groups may be assorting locally by SMR phenotype. Recent research examining intraspecific diversity has mainly focussed on differences among individuals, or among populations inhabiting different geographic regions. These results indicate that, in social species, phenotypic differences among groups may be influenced by a hierarchy of effects, with abiotic environmental characteristics affecting the distribution of metabolic traits generally and mechanisms of assortment driving the basal energy demand among social groups within a site.

The dataset consists of an Excel datasheet containing location data and respirometry metabolism estimates for the damselfish Chromis viridis.

The full methodology will be available from the Related Publications link below when the paper (submitted to the Journal of Fish Biology) is published.

 

Full description

This dataset is available as a spreadsheet in MS Excel (.xlsx) and Open Document formats (.ods)

Created: 2019-01-25

Data time period: 31 10 2013 to 30 12 2013

This dataset is part of a larger collection

Click to explore relationships graph

145.46129,-14.69522 145.46341,-14.6939 145.46501,-14.692 145.46592,-14.68973 145.46606,-14.68729 145.46541,-14.68493 145.46404,-14.68288 145.46208,-14.68133 145.45973,-14.68045 145.45721,-14.68032 145.45477,-14.68094 145.45265,-14.68227 145.45105,-14.68416 145.45014,-14.68644 145.45,-14.68888 145.45065,-14.69124 145.45202,-14.69329 145.45397,-14.69483 145.45633,-14.69571 145.45885,-14.69585 145.46129,-14.69522

145.45802875422,-14.688082225771

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

Identifiers
  • Local : cc7ddc6bcaac9afc6de46d376f5e04d4
  • Local : https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/386a3a87fa5647e3d2f77101a8d4ade4
  • DOI : 10.25903/5c4a754d43218