NOVEL FEATURES OF AN INDUCIBLE DEFENSE SYSTEM IN LARVAL TREE FROGS (HYLA CHRYSOSCELIS)

Jonathan L. Richardson2

Department of Biology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904-4327 USA



Organisms in aquatic ecosystems must often tolerate variable environmental conditions, including an uncertain risk of predation. Individuals that can maintain plastic defenses against predation will increase their survival when predators are present, but will not incur the costs of these defenses when the risk of predation is low and the defense is not induced. Larvae of the pond-breeding anuran Hyla chrysoscelis develop a conspicuous phenotype in the presence of predators consisting of a brightly colored tail and a deeper tail fin. In this study, I attempted to identify the source of the chemical signal that induces this defensive morphology in this species. I tested whether metabolites alone, originating from the prey but passing through the predator, were able to induce the same morphological response as the combination of alarm signals released directly by attacked conspecifics, and metabolites. I used morphometric and tail conspicuousness data to assess tadpole response to the perceived risk of predation by larval odonate predators (Anax junius). I also tested whether this inducing cue could be recognized across species by measuring the morphological response of H. chrysoscelis tadpoles exposed to cues emitted when tadpoles of a closely related genus (Pseudacris crucifer) were consumed. Tadpoles exhibited a clean graded response of both overall shape and tail morphology in response to all cues, corresponding to their relative reliability as indicators of a risk of predation. H. chrysoscelis tadpoles were also able to respond to cues emitted when tadpoles of a closely related genus were consumed by predators. These results illustrate that tadpoles of this species are able to respond to metabolites alone without alarm signals, and that interspecific chemical communication is a primary mechanism for predator avoidance in this inducible defense system.

Keywords: alarm signals, Anax, anuran, Hyla, inducible defense, interspecific communication, metabolites, phenotypic plasticity, plasticity response gradient, predator avoidance

Received: April 5, 2005; Revised: July 26, 2005; Accepted: August 4, 2005

2Present address: Department of Biological Structure, University of Washington, Box 357420, Seattle, Washington 98195-7420 USA. E-mail:

Cited by

Nancy M. Schoeppner, Rick A. Relyea. (2009) Interpreting the smells of predation: how alarm cues and kairomones induce different prey defences. Functional Ecology
Online publication date: 1-Jul-2009.
CrossRef
J. C. Touchon, K. M. Warkentin. (2008) Fish and dragonfly nymph predators induce opposite shifts in color and morphology of tadpoles. Oikos 117:4, 634-640
Online publication date: 1-May-2008.
CrossRef
J. C. Touchon, K. M. Warkentin. (2008) Fish and dragonfly nymph predators induce opposite shifts in color and morphology of tadpoles. Oikos 0:0, 080227085440234-0
Online publication date: 27-Mar-2008.
CrossRef