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Reciprocal phenotypic plasticity in a predator-prey interaction between larval amphibians
Kishida, Osamu
Mizuta, Yuuki
Nishimura, Kinya
Location: http://hdl.handle.net/2115/30191
Ecology. 87(6), 2006, 1599-1604
http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/0012-9658(2006)87[1599:RPPIAP]2.0.CO;2

In biological interactions, phenotypic change in interacting organisms induced by their interaction partners causes a substantial shift in some environmental factor of the partners, which may subsequently change their phenotype in response to that modified environmental factor. Few examples of such arms-race-like plastic responses, known as reciprocal phenotypic plasticity, have been identified in predator–prey interactions. We experimentally identified a reciprocal defensive plastic response of a prey species against a predator with a predaceous phenotype using a model system of close predator–prey interaction. Rana pirica tadpoles (the prey species) were reared with larvae of the salamander Hynobius retardatus (the predator species) having either a predaceous or a typical, nonpredaceous phenotype. The H. retardatus larvae with the predaceous phenotype, which is known to be induced by the presence of R. pirica tadpoles, induced a more defensive phenotype in the tadpoles than did larvae with the typical phenotype. The result suggests that the reciprocal phenotypic plasticity of R. pirica tadpoles is in response to a phenotype-specific signal under a close-signal recognition process.

Belongs to: Hokkaido University Collection of Scholarly and Academic Papers

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Reciprocal phenotypic plasticity in a predator-prey interaction between larval amphibians
Id. 29465027
Idioma inglés
Titulo Reciprocal phenotypic plasticity in a predator-prey interaction between larval amphibians
Autor(es) Kishida, Osamu
Mizuta, Yuuki
Nishimura, Kinya
Location http://hdl.handle.net/2115/30191
Ecology. 87(6), 2006, 1599-1604
http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/0012-9658(2006)87[1599:RPPIAP]2.0.CO;2
Versión 1.0
Estado Final
Descripción In biological interactions, phenotypic change in interacting organisms induced by their interaction partners causes a substantial shift in some environmental factor of the partners, which may subsequently change their phenotype in response to that modified environmental factor. Few examples of such arms-race-like plastic responses, known as reciprocal phenotypic plasticity, have been identified in predator–prey interactions. We experimentally identified a reciprocal defensive plastic response of a prey species against a predator with a predaceous phenotype using a model system of close predator–prey interaction. Rana pirica tadpoles (the prey species) were reared with larvae of the salamander Hynobius retardatus (the predator species) having either a predaceous or a typical, nonpredaceous phenotype. The H. retardatus larvae with the predaceous phenotype, which is known to be induced by the presence of R. pirica tadpoles, induced a more defensive phenotype in the tadpoles than did larvae with the typical phenotype. The result suggests that the reciprocal phenotypic plasticity of R. pirica tadpoles is in response to a phenotype-specific signal under a close-signal recognition process.
Palabras clave arms race
Tipo de recurso article
Tipo de Interactividad Expositivo
Nivel de Interactividad muy bajo
Audiencia Estudiante
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Estructura Atomic
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Fecha de contribución 28-nov-2007
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