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Damsel in distress: captured damselfish prey emit chemical cues that attract secondary predators and improve escape chances
Damsel in distress: captured damselfish prey emit chemical cues that attract secondary predators and improve escape chances
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Damsel in distress: captured damselfish prey emit chemical cues that attract secondary predators and improve escape chances
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Damsel in distress: captured damselfish prey emit chemical cues that attract secondary predators and improve escape chances
Damsel in distress: captured damselfish prey emit chemical cues that attract secondary predators and improve escape chances
Journal Article

Damsel in distress: captured damselfish prey emit chemical cues that attract secondary predators and improve escape chances

2015
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Overview
In aquatic environments, many prey animals possess damage-released chemical alarm cues that elicit antipredator behaviours in responsive con- and heterospecifics. Despite considerable study, the selective advantage of alarm cues remains unclear. In an attempt to investigate one of the more promising hypotheses concerning the evolution of alarm cues, we examined whether the cue functions in a fashion analogous to the distress vocalizations emitted by many terrestrial animals. Our results suggest that chemical alarm cues in damselfish (Pomacentridae) may have evolved to benefit the cue sender by attracting secondary predators who disrupt the predation event, allowing the prey a greater chance to escape. The coral reef piscivore, the dusky dottyback (Pseudochromis fuscus), chemically eavesdrops on predation events and uses chemical alarm cues from fish prey (lemon damselfish; Pomacentrus moluccensis) in an attempt to find and steal prey from primary predators. Field studies showed that Ps. fuscus aggregate at sites where prey alarm cue has been experimentally released. Furthermore, secondary predators attempted to steal captured prey of primary predators in laboratory trials and enhanced prey escape chances by 35–40%. These results are the first, to the best of our knowledge, to demonstrate a mechanism by which marine fish may benefit from the production and release of alarm cues, and highlight the complex and important role that semiochemicals play in marine predator–prey interactions.