Abstract

Crypsis, or the ability to avoid detection and/or recognition, is an important and widespread anti-predator strategy across the animal kingdom. Many animals are able to camouflage themselves by adapting their body colour to the local environment. In particular, rapid changes in body colour are often critical to the survival of cryptic prey which rely on evading detection by predators. This is especially pertinent for animals subject to spatio-temporal variability in their environment, as they must adapt to acute changes in their visual surroundings. However, which features of the local environment are most relevant is not well understood. In particular, little is known about how social context interacts with other environmental stimuli to influence crypsis. Here, we use a common cryptic prey animal, the goby (Pseudogobius species 2) to examine how the presence and body colour of conspecifics influence the rate and extent to which gobies change colour. We find that solitary gobies change colour to match their background faster and to a greater extent than gobies in pairs. Further, we find that this relationship holds irrespective of the colour of nearby conspecifics. This study demonstrates the importance of social context in mediating colour change in cryptic animals.

Highlights

  • Throughout the animal kingdom, prey animals are under intense selective pressure to develop, and effectively employ, various means of avoiding predation

  • Colour change in cryptic gobies is influenced by social context, in particular the presence or absence of nearby conspecifics

  • The colour of nearby conspecifics had no significant effect on the colour change of focal gobies

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Summary

Introduction

Throughout the animal kingdom, prey animals are under intense selective pressure to develop, and effectively employ, various means of avoiding predation. A wide variety of strategies exist to mitigate the risk of predation. Defences often involve some form of crypsis; perhaps the most widely used of all anti-predator strategies. As defined by Ruxton, is a suite of phenotypic and behavioural strategies which augment the user’s ability to evade detection by predators [1]. Crypsis encompasses an array of approaches including camouflage, nocturnality and refuging behaviour. Camouflage refers to strategies in which an animal is able to avoid detection by appearing visually indistinct from the royalsocietypublishing.org/journal/rsos R.

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