Data from: Anxiety-like behaviour increases safety from fish predation in an amphipod crustacea
Anxiety is an emotional state generally expressed as sustained apprehension of the environment and elevated vigilance. It has been widely reported in vertebrates, and, more recently, in a few invertebrate species. However, its fitness value remains elusive. We investigated anxiety-like behaviour and...
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Zusammenfassung: | Anxiety is an emotional state generally expressed as sustained
apprehension of the environment and elevated vigilance. It has been widely
reported in vertebrates, and, more recently, in a few invertebrate
species. However, its fitness value remains elusive. We investigated
anxiety-like behaviour and its consequences in an amphipod crustacean,
using electric-shock as an aversive stimuli, and pharmacological assays.
Anxiety-like state induced by electric shocks in Gammarus fossarum was
expressed through increased sheltering behaviour in absence of predation
risk, thereby showing the pervasive nature of such behavioural response.
Increasing the number of electric shocks both increased refuge use and
delayed behavioural recovery. The behavioural effect of electric shock was
mitigated by pre-treatment with LY354740, a metabotropic glutamate
receptor group II/III agonist. Importantly, we found that this modulation
of decision making under anxiety-like state resulted in an increased
survival to predation in microcosm experiments. This study confirms the
interest in taking an evolutionary view to the study of anxiety, and calls
for further investigation on the costs counterbalancing the survival
benefit of an elevated anxiety level evidenced here. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.3kj5s |