Abstract

Naïve zebra danios ( Brachydanio rerio) flee from an approaching predator when the angle subtended at the danio's eye by the predator changes at a rate greater than some characteristic threshold value. The hypothesis was tested that this value declines, and hence reactive distance increases, as a function of the number of past experiences with the predator. Artificial predators of two types, a model and a film of an approaching object, were presented to the danios daily and changes in behaviour recorded. The rate of change of visual angle at the time of response to the predator (dα/d t threshold) declined asymptotically with increasing experience. Consequently, flight distance increased asymptotically. The change was not due to growth, maturation, or increased familiarity with the testing situation. The danios apparently associated the visual characteristics of the predator with its subsequent high rate of angular growth and began to respond to these visual characteristics prior to dα/d t exceeding the threshold. The angle of escape was not affected by experience. Escape velocity increased with experience of the film predator, but not with experience of the model predator. No decrement of the learned change in reactive distance was evident after 10 days without experience with the film predator.

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