Neuropeptide manipulation has behavioural and cascading fitness consequences in wild-living fish

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Neuropeptide manipulation has behavioural and cascading fitness consequences in wild-living fish
Abstract
Due to the difficulty of simultaneously assessing variation in individual physiology, behaviour and fitness, we often know little about the mechanistic basis of life-history trade-offs and fitness variation. It is similarly challenging to examine how physiological variation in one individual has cascading fitness consequences for others in the social environment. Using a wild-living fish (ocellated wrasse, Symphodus ocellatus), we manipulated a neuropeptide pathway associated with courtship, aggression and parental care in vertebrates (arginine vasotocin, AVT) and directly examined the behavioural and fitness consequences. Nesting males injected with the AVT antagonist increased their paternal care, resulting in increased hatching of offspring and increased reproductive success of all individuals that mated at his nest. By directly examining physiology, behaviour and reproductive success, we revealed how a small change in individual physiology has clear and direct fitness consequences for multiple individuals. © 2019 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour
Publication
Animal Behaviour
Date
11/2019
Volume
157
Pages
69-76
Journal Abbr
Animal Behaviour
Citation Key
stiverNeuropeptideManipulationHas2019
Accessed
10/4/19, 8:17 PM
ISSN
00033472
Language
English
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Crossref)
Extra
5 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] Citation Key Alias: lens.org/001-297-635-637-918, pop00078 tex.type: [object Object]
Citation
Stiver, K. A., Marsh-Rollo, S. E., & Alonzo, S. H. (2019). Neuropeptide manipulation has behavioural and cascading fitness consequences in wild-living fish. Animal Behaviour, 157, 69–76. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2019.08.020