Does gregariousness function as an antipredator mechanism in the Mediterranean slipper lobster, Scyllarides latus?
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Published:2001
Issue:8
Volume:52
Page:1133
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ISSN:1323-1650
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Container-title:Marine and Freshwater Research
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Mar. Freshwater Res.
Author:
Lavalli Kari L.,Spanier Ehud
Abstract
The possible antipredation benefits of group living have been difficult to
study in species where the size and incidence of groups are beyond the
investigator’s control. A field test with tethered Mediterranean slipper
lobsters, Scyllarides latus, revealed that attack and
capture rates for solitary individuals did not differ significantly from those
for grouped individuals after either 3 or 24 h of exposure to potential
predators. Although predator attack rates on grouped and solitary lobsters
also did not differ after 3 h, they were significantly higher on groups than
on solitary lobsters after 24 h. Differences in fish behaviour during the
first hour of lobster exposure suggest that confusion effects played a role
only initially and, presumably, conferred a short-lived advantage on clumped
prey. Confusion effects were represented by a higher frequency of passes and
reapproaches for fish concentrating on grouped lobsters and a lower frequency
of bites. Attacks were more directed for fish concentrating on solitary
lobsters. With increasing exposure time, however, groups may have served to
facilitate predation because triggerfish
(Balistes carolinensis) were equally successful at
capturing grouped and solitary lobsters.
Publisher
CSIRO Publishing
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
15 articles.
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