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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Despite much effort to ascertain the consequences of temperature variation for a wide range of animal performance
traits, the effect of temperature on interactions among organisms is still poorly understood. The
present work tests for a direct influence of water temperature on sexual recognition, mate preferences and
femaleefemale interactions in the pipefish, Syngnathus abaster. Three experiments were conducted by
monitoring time spent in the vicinity of conspecifics at three water temperatures intended to reflect sea
water temperatures before the onset of reproduction (15 ºC) and during the early (18º C) and late breeding
season (24 ºC). Four major results emerged: (1) S. abaster can visually discriminate potential mates from fish
of the same sex; (2) males and females responded differently with the former diverting their attention towards
the opposite sex at intermediate (18º C) and high temperatures (24º C), while the latter only showed
a significant interest in potential mates at 24 ºC, devoting an equal amount of interest towards both males
and females at 18º C; (3) at breeding season water temperatures, both sexes discriminated against smaller
partners, preferring larger ones; (4) different-sized females adopted distinct temperature-modulated behavioural
responses, possibly because large dominant females, which engage in competition at 18º C, constrained
the reproduction of smaller ones, which seem to compete only at 24º C. These results highlight
the importance of temperature as an effective agent in the modulation of S. abaster reproductive behaviour.
Considerations on the ecological significance of the observed behavioural patterns are also discussed.
Description
Keywords
Female-female competition Mate choice Pipefish Reproduction Sexual selection Syngnathidae Syngnathus abaster Water temperature
Citation
Animal Behaviour, 74, 1525-1533
Publisher
Elsevier