Substantial plasticity of reproduction and parental care in response to local resource availability in a wild clownfish population

Plasticity, the capacity of individuals to respond to changing environments by modifying traits, may be critically important for population persistence by allowing for adaptive responses on shorter timescales than genetic change. Here, we use the clown anemonefish Amphiprion percula, whose access to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oikos 2020-12, Vol.129 (12), p.1844-1855
Hauptverfasser: Barbasch, Tina A., Rueger, Theresa, Srinivasan, Maya, Wong, Marian Y. L., Jones, Geoffrey P., Buston, Peter M.
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container_end_page 1855
container_issue 12
container_start_page 1844
container_title Oikos
container_volume 129
creator Barbasch, Tina A.
Rueger, Theresa
Srinivasan, Maya
Wong, Marian Y. L.
Jones, Geoffrey P.
Buston, Peter M.
description Plasticity, the capacity of individuals to respond to changing environments by modifying traits, may be critically important for population persistence by allowing for adaptive responses on shorter timescales than genetic change. Here, we use the clown anemonefish Amphiprion percula, whose access to resources is constrained by their anemones, to test the role of plasticity in generating variation in reproductive success among groups. We surveyed a wild clownfish population and found positive correlations between anemone area, fish size, reproduction and parental care. We used structural equation modeling to test the hypothesis that these correlations emanate from variation in anemone area and found support for a pathway linking anemone area to female investment, female investment to male investment and male investment to embryo survival. Next, we experimentally tested whether plasticity in response to resource availability can result in variation in parental traits using a feeding manipulation and found substantial plasticity in reproduction and parental care in response to changes in the availability of food resources. The results of this study reveal the role of plasticity in response to local resource availability in generating variation among individuals in reproductive strategies, linking studies of behavior and demography in this model species, and ultimately contributing to our ability to predict how populations might cope with environmental changes.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/oik.07674
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Amphiprion percula
Animal embryos
Animal reproduction
Availability
Breeding success
Changing environments
Demography
Embryos
Environmental changes
Females
Fish
Fish reproduction
Food availability
Food resources
Food security
habitat quality
Investment
Males
Marine fishes
Mathematical models
Multivariate statistical analysis
Parental behaviour
parental investment
Plastic properties
Plasticity
Reproduction
Resource availability
Survival
title Substantial plasticity of reproduction and parental care in response to local resource availability in a wild clownfish population
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