Abstract

We published a study recently testing the link between brain size and behavioural plasticity using brain size selected guppy (Poecilia reticulata) lines (2019, Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 32, 218-226). Only large-brained fish showed habituation to a new, but actually harmless environment perceived as risky, by increasing movement activity over the 20-day observation period. We concluded that "Our results suggest that brain size likely explains some of the variation in behavioural plasticity found at the intraspecific level". In a commentary published in the same journal, Haave-Audet et al. challenged the main message of our study, stating that (a) relative brain size is not a suitable proxy for cognitive ability and (b) habituation measured by us is likely not adaptive and costly. In our response, we first show that a decade's work has proven repeatedly that relative brain size is indeed positively linked to cognitive performance in our model system. Second, we discuss how switching from stressed to unstressed behaviour in stressful situations without real risk is likely adaptive. Finally, we point out that the main cost of behavioural plasticity in our case is the development and maintenance of the neural system needed for information processing, and not the expression of plasticity. We hope that our discussion with Haave-Audet et al. helps clarifying some central issues in this emerging research field.

Highlights

  • We recently tested the hypothesis that increased brain size leads to increased behavioural plasticity (Herczeg et al, 2019)

  • We proposed that a proximate link between increased brain size, increased cognitive abilities and increased behavioural plasticity might exist, and that this link could help explain the occur‐ rence of between‐individual variation in behavioural plasticity

  • Taken to‐ gether, this means that selection for larger brains in these selection lines changed the relative amount of neurons. This in turn provides ex‐ perimental evidence that the overall number of neurons is strongly associated with overall brain size, at least in populations under di‐ rectional selection for these traits, and we propose this is the causal factor behind the observed differences in cognitive ability in these brain size selection lines (Marhounova et al, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

We recently tested the hypothesis that increased brain size leads to increased behavioural plasticity (Herczeg et al, 2019). KEYWORDS behavioural plasticity, brain size, cognition, habituation, Poecilia reticulata

Results
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