Behavioral plasticity mitigates risk across environments and predators during anuran metamorphosis

COMPLEX LIFE CYCLE 0106 biological sciences Panama Environment Risk Assessment 01 natural sciences Heteroptera Escape Reaction PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY ESCAPE PERFORMANCE Animals PREDADORES Population Density PREDATION FENOTIPOS Metamorphosis, Biological TRADE OFF Spiders 15. Life on land Larva Predatory Behavior Linear Models DEPREDACIÓN Anura
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-013-2714-8 Publication Date: 2013-07-03T10:20:41Z
ABSTRACT
Most animals metamorphose, changing morphology, physiology, behavior and ecological interactions. Size- and habitat-dependent mortality risk is thought to affect the evolution and plastic expression of metamorphic timing, and high predation during the morphological transition is posited as a critical selective force shaping complex life cycles. Nonetheless, empirical data on how risk changes across metamorphosis and stage-specific habitats, or how that varies with size, are rare. We examined predator-prey interactions of red-eyed treefrogs, Agalychnis callidryas, with an aquatic predator (giant water bug, Belostoma) and a semi-terrestrial predator (fishing spider, Thaumasia) across metamorphosis. We manipulated tadpole density to generate variation in metamorph size and conducted predation trials at multiple developmental stages. We quantified how frog behavior (activity) changes across metamorphic development, habitats, and predator presence or absence. In aquatic trials with water bugs, frog mortality increased with forelimb emergence, as hypothesized. In semi-terrestrial trials, contrary to predictions, predation by spiders increased, not decreased, with tail resorption. In neither case did frog size affect mortality. Frogs reduced activity upon forelimb emergence in the water, and further with emergence into air, then increased activity with tail resorption. Longer-tailed metamorphs were captured more often in spider attacks, but attacked less, as most attacks followed prey movements. Metamorphs behaviorally compensated for poor escape performance more effectively on land than in water, thus emergence timing may critically affect mortality. The developmental timing of the ecological transition between environments that select for different larval and juvenile phenotypes is an important, neglected variable in studies of complex life cycles.
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