Abstract

Chemical communication can induce a multitude of behaviours when detected by fish olfactory systems, from parental care, predation and alarm signalling, to foraging, schooling, reproduction, and migration. Chemical cues provide information that visual traits cannot and fish can respond to chemical cues without any additional sensory cue. In this way, pheromones play an essential role in the fitness of fishes. Given that Aphyocharax anisitsi inhabits environments characterized by cloudy and highly vegetated waters, it is interesting to evaluate the olfactory contribution in their communication. Here, we investigated the relevance of chemical cues in the types of behaviours triggered in A anisitsi by two experimental contexts: 1) non-social and olfactory context (conspecific-chemical cues), and 2) social context (conspecific female or male presence). Non-social context experiments suggest that males of A. anisitsi respond to both male and female-chemical cues even in the absence of other sensory inputs. The high olfactory sensitivity of characids in general and of A. anisitsi, in particular, could facilitate vital functions, such as foraging and conspecific recognition in habitats that impose severe restrictions on the visual system.

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