Abstract

Natural habitats contain dynamic elements, such as varying local illumination. Can such features mitigate the salience of organism movement? Dynamic illumination is particularly prevalent in coral reefs, where patterns known as ‘water caustics’ play chaotically in the shallows. In behavioural experiments with a wild-caught reef fish, the Picasso triggerfish (Rhinecanthus aculeatus), we demonstrate that the presence of dynamic water caustics negatively affects the detection of moving prey items, as measured by attack latency, relative to static water caustic controls. Manipulating two further features of water caustics (sharpness and scale) implies that the masking effect should be most effective in shallow water: scenes with fine scale and sharp water caustics induce the longest attack latencies. Due to the direct impact upon foraging efficiency, we expect the presence of dynamic water caustics to influence decisions about habitat choice and foraging by wild prey and predators.

Highlights

  • Variation in local illumination is an important visual component of most habitats [1,2,3], but is pertinent if the variation is rapid, such as that elicited by water caustics

  • Using a similar paradigm to that of Matchette et al [24], we explore whether prey detection by a visually guided predator will be disrupted by dynamic illumination, hypothesizing that water caustic flicker will mask the motion of a target prey item

  • Our data demonstrate that the detection of moving prey items by Picasso triggerfish is significantly disrupted by the presence of dynamic illumination

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Summary

Introduction

Variation in local illumination (hereafter, ‘dynamic illumination’) is an important visual component of most habitats [1,2,3], but is pertinent if the variation is rapid, such as that elicited by water caustics. Using a similar paradigm to that of Matchette et al [24], we explore whether prey detection by a visually guided predator will be disrupted by dynamic illumination, hypothesizing that water caustic flicker will mask the motion of a target prey item.

Results
Conclusion

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