Psychoactive pollution suppresses individual differences in fish behaviour

Author:

Polverino Giovanni1ORCID,Martin Jake M.2ORCID,Bertram Michael G.23ORCID,Soman Vrishin R.14,Tan Hung2,Brand Jack A.2ORCID,Mason Rachel T.2,Wong Bob B. M.2

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Western Australia (M092), 35 Stirling Highway, 6009 Perth, WA, Australia

2. School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Australia

3. Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Environmental Studies, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden

4. Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, New York University Tandon School of Engineering, USA

Abstract

Environmental contamination by pharmaceuticals is global, substantially altering crucial behaviours in animals and impacting on their reproduction and survival. A key question is whether the consequences of these pollutants extend beyond mean behavioural changes, restraining differences in behaviour between individuals. In a controlled, two-year, multigenerational experiment with independent mesocosm populations, we exposed guppies ( Poecilia reticulata ) to environmentally realistic levels of the ubiquitous pollutant fluoxetine (Prozac). Fish (unexposed: n = 59, low fluoxetine: n = 57, high fluoxetine: n = 58) were repeatedly assayed on four separate occasions for activity and risk-taking behaviour. Fluoxetine homogenized individuals' activity, with individual variation in populations exposed to even low concentrations falling to less than half that in unexposed populations. To understand the proximate mechanism underlying these changes, we tested the relative contribution of variation within and between individuals to the overall decline in individual variation. We found strong evidence that fluoxetine erodes variation in activity between but not within individuals, revealing the hidden consequences of a ubiquitous contaminant on phenotypic variation in fish—likely to impair adaptive potential to environmental change.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Monash University - Postgraduate Publications Award

Australian Government - Research Training Program Scholarship

Forrest Research Foundation

University of Western Australia - Fellowship Support Grant

Kempestiftelserna

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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