Size-selective harvesting impacts learning and decision-making in zebrafish, Danio rerio

Author:

Roy Tamal1ORCID,Rohr Tabea2,Arlinghaus Robert13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Fish Biology, Fisheries and Aquaculture, Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries , Müggelseedamm 310, 12587 Berlin , Germany

2. University of Potsdam, Faculty of Science , Karl-Liebknecht-Str. 24-25, 14476 Potsdam , Germany

3. Division of Integrative Fisheries Management, Department of Crop and Animal Sciences, Faculty of Life Sciences, Humboldt University of Berlin , Unter den Linden 6, 10099 Berlin , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Size-selective harvesting common to fisheries is known to evolutionarily alter life history and behavioral traits in exploited fish populations. Changes in these traits may, in turn, modify learning and decision-making abilities through energetic trade-offs with brain investment that can vary across development or via correlations with personality traits. We examined the hypothesis of size-selection induced alteration of learning performance in three selection lines of zebrafish (Danio rerio) generated through intensive harvesting for large, small and random body-size for five generations followed by no further selection for ten generations that allowed examining evolutionarily fixed outcomes. We tested associative learning ability throughout ontogeny in fish groups using a color-discrimination paradigm with a food reward, and the propensity to make group decisions in an associative task. All selection lines showed significant associative abilities that improved across ontogeny. The large-harvested line fish showed a significantly slower associative learning speed as subadults and adults than the controls. We found no evidence of memory decay as a function of size-selection. Decision-making speed did not vary across lines, but the large-harvested line made faster decisions during the probe trial. Collectively, our results show that large size-selective harvesting evolutionarily alters associative and decision-making abilities in zebrafish, which could affect resource acquisition and survival in exploited fish populations.

Funder

Alexander von Humboldt foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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