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Evolutionary loss of threat display in more social species: phylogenetic comparisons, natural interactions in the wild, and experiments with models

机译:更多社会物种的威胁显示的进化丧失:系统发育比较,野外的自然相互作用,以及模型的实验

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Fitness can be increased dramatically by communication. So why, given the benefits of communication, would displays ever be completely lost evolutionarily? Threat displays, in particular, are relatively cheap to produce and are precursors of attack, so should be especially hard for both senders and receivers to lose completely. Here we explore an evolutionary transition in sociality, testing whether complete evolutionary loss of threat display has occurred in 'more social' hermit crab species, which interact more frequently with conspecifics. First, we synthesised literature and observations on the presence versus absence of threat display across hermit crab species, mapping this information onto a phylogenetic tree. We found that all 'less social' species - marine and terrestrial - produce threat displays, consistent with threat display being the ancestral state. But 'more social' terrestrial species, which are highly derived, do not produce a threat display, suggesting an evolutionary loss. Next, we contrasted natural interactions in the wild within a less social species (Pagurus bernhardus) versus within a more social species (Coenobita compressors), finding that the less social species, despite a lower rate of social encounter, had a higher rate of display per encounter (24%). In contrast, the more social species' rate of display per encounter was negligible (<1%), effectively indicating a loss in production. Finally, we experimentally reanimated threat display in the more social species, using postured models to test whether receivers retained any responsiveness to threat display. Starkly, receivers were not deterred by threat display, showing equal responsiveness across both threat and non-threat models, regardless of whether the models were stationary or dynamically moving. Our results thus reveal a case of complete collapse of communication involving threat display, implicating the social environment in this loss. In more social species, an extreme dependence on conspecific-derived shells likely drove a 'desperado effect', with threat displays being lost because they could not stop others from pursuing these valuable resources.
机译:通过沟通可以急剧增加健身。那么,为什么鉴于沟通的好处,将显示出现完全失去的进化呢?特别是威胁显示,生产和攻击前体是相对便宜的,因此,发件人和接收器都应该难以完全丢失。在这里,我们探讨了社会性的进化过渡,测试了在“更多社交”隐士蟹种类中发生完全进化的威胁展示损失,这更频繁地与ConspecIfics相互作用。首先,我们在隐士蟹种群中合成文献和观察与威胁显示的存在,将该信息映射到系统发育树上。我们发现所有的“社会”种类较少 - 海洋和陆地 - 产生威胁展示,与威胁显示是祖先的状态。但是,“更多社会”陆地物种,这是高度得出的,不会产生威胁显示,表明进化损失。接下来,我们在更少的社会物种(Pagurus Bernhardus)与更多的社会物种(Coenobita压缩机)内对比野生的自然相互作用,发现尽管社会遭遇率较低,但显示出更高的展示率每次遭遇(24%)。相比之下,每次遭遇的社会的显示率越多(<1%),有效地表明生产损失。最后,我们通过凸起模型在经过更新的社交物种中进行尝试的威胁显示,以测试接收者是否保留了任何响应威胁显示的响应。显着的,接收器不会被威胁显示阻止,显示跨威胁和非威胁模型的平等响应性,无论模型是否静止或动态移动。因此,我们的结果揭示了涉及威胁显示的沟通完全崩溃的案例,暗示了社会环境在这种损失中。在更多的社会物种中,对着面对的派生壳的极端依赖可能驱动了“贬低效应”,威胁显示丢失,因为他们无法阻止他人追求这些有价值的资源。

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