基于直接行为观察假设方尾石斑鱼的新交配行为

Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
R. Karkarey, Amod M. Zambre, K. Isvaran, R. Arthur
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引用次数: 1

摘要

从历史上看,未经捕捞的高密度产卵群并不常见。从这样的集合中观察到的行为是罕见的,有时可能是新颖和出乎意料的。考虑到记录产卵群体所需的大量证据,我们如何才能最好地报告产卵群体中罕见和不寻常的行为变化?基于两年来对Lakshadweep群岛方尾石斑鱼高密度产卵聚集的水中观察,我们描述了一种以前未报道的雄性替代繁殖策略(ART)和一种相反大小的分类,即大型雄性向几只小型雌性求偶,这些雌性在水中产卵(https://doi.org/10.1186/s12898-017-0120-5)。在批评我们的手稿时,有人认为我们的观察、方法和解释是不充分的、有缺陷的,不符合目前公认的理论(https://doi.org/10.1186/s12898-018-0206-8)。在详细反驳主要方法论和理论批评的同时,我们质疑如何最好地记录和解释鲜为人知的系统中的新行为。报道新颖性本身很难成为批评的基础。我们的报告依赖于在两个产卵年的最高密度下进行的直接水中观测。批评忽略了这一点,而是选择关注一个补充视频,这不是我们结论的基础。与其他研究该物种的研究人员一样,我们没有直接观察交配,但报告称,求偶是整个交配系统研究中使用的一个公认的指标。除了这些方法上的担忧,作者认为我们的观察没有理论支持。然而,性选择理论提供了完善的框架,表明在非常高的交配密度下,可以出现各种策略,这些策略往往因种群和地点而异。在我们的原始论文中,我们使用这一更广泛的性选择理论以及详细的行为数据,提出了可信的进化解释,这些解释在这些新颖的高密度系统中值得检验。我们同意作者的观点,即应该仔细审查新的观察结果,因为它们可能会挑战我们目前对人群表现出的行为范围的理解,并成为理论进步的跳板。鉴于这些意见的罕见性,应根据其文件的严谨性和报告的透明度来评估这些意见。在这种情况下,我们希望我们精心记录的观察结果能为方尾石斑鱼等物种迷人而复杂的自然历史增添有用的内容。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Hypothesizing novel mating behaviours in the squaretail grouper based on direct behavioural observations
Historically unfished, high-density spawning aggregations are vanishingly uncommon. Behavioural observations from such aggregations are rare, and may be sometimes novel and unexpected. Given the weight of evidence required to document spawning aggregations, how can we best report rare and unusual behavioural variations in spawning populations? Based on two years of in-water observations of a high-density spawning aggregation of the squaretail grouper in the Lakshadweep Archipelago, we described a previously unreported male alternative reproductive tactic (ART) and an inverse size assortment with large males courting several small females that shoaled mid-water (https://doi.org/10.1186/s12898-017-0120-5). In critiquing our manuscript, it has been suggested that our observations, methodologies and interpretation are inadequate, flawed, and do not fit within currently accepted theory (https://doi.org/10.1186/s12898-018-0206-8). While offering a detailed counter of the main methodological and theoretical criticisms we question how best to document and interpret novel behaviours in poorly known systems. Reporting novelty itself can hardly be the basis of criticism. Our report relied on direct in-water observations, conducted at peak densities over two spawning years. The critique ignores this, choosing instead to focus on a supplementary video which was not the basis of our conclusions. Like other researchers working on this species, we did not directly observe mating, but report courtship as a well-established proxy used across mating systems studies. Apart from these methodological concerns, the authors suggest that there is no theoretical support for our observations. However, sexual selection theory provides well-established frameworks showing that, at very high mating densities, a variety of tactics can emerge, that often vary considerably between populations and locations. In our original paper, we use this broader theory of sexual selection together with detailed behavioural data to propose plausible evolutionary explanations that bear testing in these novel, high-density systems. We agree with the authors that novel observations should be scrutinised carefully as they can challenge our current understanding of the range of behaviours populations display and serve as a springboard for theoretical advancement. Given their rarity, these observations should be evaluated against the rigour of their documentation and the transparency of their reporting. In this context, we hope our carefully documented observations serve as a useful addition to the fascinating and complex natural history of species like the squaretail grouper.
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Rethinking Ecology
Rethinking Ecology Environmental Science-Ecology
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