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Does predation risk affect body size and shape ontogeny in the silver barb (Barbonymus gonionotus)? |
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รหัสดีโอไอ | |
Creator | Chantima Piyapong |
Title | Does predation risk affect body size and shape ontogeny in the silver barb (Barbonymus gonionotus)? |
Contributor | Supakorn Thaima, Kriangkrai Somkham, Anchalee Sae-lim and Julien Claude |
Publisher | Nakhon Pathom Rajabhat University |
Publication Year | 2562 |
Journal Title | Interdisciplinary Research Review |
Journal Vol. | 14 |
Journal No. | 4 |
Page no. | 8 |
Keyword | developmental plasticity, predation, fish |
URL Website | http://apps.npru.ac.th |
Website title | สถาบันวิจัยและพัฒนา มหาวิทยาลัยราชภัฏนครปฐม |
ISSN | 2697-522X |
Abstract | We studied here the e ect of predation risk on size and shape during the development of the Cyprinid fish (Barbonymusgonionotus). In the experiment, juvenile silver barbs (Barbonymus gonionotus) were developing either together or not togetherwith the predator snakehead fish (Channa striata) during 25 days. Predation was limited by isolating the predator from thesilver barb with a net. In replicated trays, 60 fish were randomly selected and compared before and after the experiment inpresence and absence of the predator. The experiment was replicated three times. Fourteen landmarks were recorded on thefish body and a generalized Procrustes superimposition was performed. Analyses of variance and linear discriminant analyseswere used to detect e ects of the predator presence on body shape and growth pattern. Results show that if presents, e ectof the predator on size and shape evolution in silver barbs is very subtle. A small increase of size and a decrease in relativecaudal peduncle height could be reported in all cases suggesting either that the predator could exert directional selection or that developmental plasticity induced by the predator was present. In the case of shape, this developmental plasticity appears to be maladaptive in the experiment because the predator may have selected for these shape attributes in the tank showing the highest predation rate. Finally we found that shape variation decreased with development suggesting that phenotypic canalisation was acquired during the ontogeny of the fish but that size di erences among individuals were accumulating with ontogeny. |