Chemical defense of toad tadpoles under risk by four predator species

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Chemical defense of toad tadpoles under risk by four predator species. / Üveges, Bálint; Szederkényi, Márk; Mahr, Katharina et al.
In: Ecology and Evolution, Vol. 9, No. 11, 01.06.2019, p. 6287-6299.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Üveges, B, Szederkényi, M, Mahr, K, Móricz, ÁM, Krüzselyi, D, Bókony, V, Hoi, H & Hettyey, A 2019, 'Chemical defense of toad tadpoles under risk by four predator species', Ecology and Evolution, vol. 9, no. 11, pp. 6287-6299. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5202

APA

Üveges, B., Szederkényi, M., Mahr, K., Móricz, Á. M., Krüzselyi, D., Bókony, V., Hoi, H., & Hettyey, A. (2019). Chemical defense of toad tadpoles under risk by four predator species. Ecology and Evolution, 9(11), 6287-6299. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5202

CBE

Üveges B, Szederkényi M, Mahr K, Móricz ÁM, Krüzselyi D, Bókony V, Hoi H, Hettyey A. 2019. Chemical defense of toad tadpoles under risk by four predator species. Ecology and Evolution. 9(11):6287-6299. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5202

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Üveges B, Szederkényi M, Mahr K, Móricz ÁM, Krüzselyi D, Bókony V et al. Chemical defense of toad tadpoles under risk by four predator species. Ecology and Evolution. 2019 Jun 1;9(11):6287-6299. Epub 2019 Apr 19. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5202

Author

Üveges, Bálint ; Szederkényi, Márk ; Mahr, Katharina et al. / Chemical defense of toad tadpoles under risk by four predator species. In: Ecology and Evolution. 2019 ; Vol. 9, No. 11. pp. 6287-6299.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Chemical defense of toad tadpoles under risk by four predator species

AU - Üveges, Bálint

AU - Szederkényi, Márk

AU - Mahr, Katharina

AU - Móricz, Ágnes M

AU - Krüzselyi, Dániel

AU - Bókony, Veronika

AU - Hoi, Herbert

AU - Hettyey, Attila

PY - 2019/6/1

Y1 - 2019/6/1

N2 - Many organisms use inducible defenses as protection against predators. In animals, inducible defenses may manifest as changes in behavior, morphology, physiology, or life history, and prey species can adjust their defensive responses based on the dangerousness of predators. Analogously, prey may also change the composition and quantity of defensive chemicals when they coexist with different predators, but such predator-induced plasticity in chemical defenses remains elusive in vertebrates. In this study, we investigated whether tadpoles of the common toad (Bufo bufo) adjust their chemical defenses to predation risk in general and specifically to the presence of different predator species; furthermore, we assessed the adaptive value of the induced defense. We reared tadpoles in the presence or absence of one of four caged predator species in a mesocosm experiment, analyzed the composition and quantity of their bufadienolide toxins, and exposed them to free-ranging predators. We found that toad tadpoles did not respond to predation risk by upregulating their bufadienolide synthesis. Fishes and newts consumed only a small percentage of toad tadpoles, suggesting that bufadienolides provided protection against vertebrate predators, irrespective of the rearing environment. Backswimmers consumed toad tadpoles regardless of treatment. Dragonfly larvae were the most voracious predators and consumed more predator-naïve toad tadpoles than tadpoles raised in the presence of dragonfly cues. These results suggest that tadpoles in our experiment had high enough toxin levels for an effective defense against vertebrate predators even in the absence of predator cues. The lack of predator-induced phenotypic plasticity in bufadienolide synthesis may be due to local adaptation for constantly high chemical defense against fishes in the study population and/or due to the high density of conspecifics.

AB - Many organisms use inducible defenses as protection against predators. In animals, inducible defenses may manifest as changes in behavior, morphology, physiology, or life history, and prey species can adjust their defensive responses based on the dangerousness of predators. Analogously, prey may also change the composition and quantity of defensive chemicals when they coexist with different predators, but such predator-induced plasticity in chemical defenses remains elusive in vertebrates. In this study, we investigated whether tadpoles of the common toad (Bufo bufo) adjust their chemical defenses to predation risk in general and specifically to the presence of different predator species; furthermore, we assessed the adaptive value of the induced defense. We reared tadpoles in the presence or absence of one of four caged predator species in a mesocosm experiment, analyzed the composition and quantity of their bufadienolide toxins, and exposed them to free-ranging predators. We found that toad tadpoles did not respond to predation risk by upregulating their bufadienolide synthesis. Fishes and newts consumed only a small percentage of toad tadpoles, suggesting that bufadienolides provided protection against vertebrate predators, irrespective of the rearing environment. Backswimmers consumed toad tadpoles regardless of treatment. Dragonfly larvae were the most voracious predators and consumed more predator-naïve toad tadpoles than tadpoles raised in the presence of dragonfly cues. These results suggest that tadpoles in our experiment had high enough toxin levels for an effective defense against vertebrate predators even in the absence of predator cues. The lack of predator-induced phenotypic plasticity in bufadienolide synthesis may be due to local adaptation for constantly high chemical defense against fishes in the study population and/or due to the high density of conspecifics.

U2 - 10.1002/ece3.5202

DO - 10.1002/ece3.5202

M3 - Article

C2 - 31236221

VL - 9

SP - 6287

EP - 6299

JO - Ecology and Evolution

JF - Ecology and Evolution

SN - 2045-7758

IS - 11

ER -