1 / 20

Effects of school size of neon tetras on their response to the presence of a zebra fish

Effects of school size of neon tetras on their response to the presence of a zebra fish. Kelsey and Jenna. Purpose of the experiment. Look at schooling behaviour in neon tetras in the presence of a predator, measured in terms of distance from a predator. Overview. Background Information

lada
Download Presentation

Effects of school size of neon tetras on their response to the presence of a zebra fish

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Effects of school size of neon tetras on their response to the presence of a zebra fish Kelsey and Jenna

  2. Purpose of the experiment Look at schooling behaviour in neon tetras in the presence of a predator, measured in terms of distance from a predator

  3. Overview • Background Information • Hypothesis • Materials • Methods • Results • Discussion • Conclusions

  4. Background Information • Schooling: anti-predator strategy • Predator confusion • More fish reduces individual’s chance of attack • More energy invested in feeding and mating

  5. Background information Neon Tetras (Cheirodoninnessi) • Small, bright, vulnerable to predation • Zebra fish (Daniorerio) • Aggressive • Territorial

  6. Background Information • Neon tetras display schooling behaviour • Zheng et. al. • Presence of unfamiliar object • Increase in school size, decrease in timidity • Darting • Time between feeding • Sloman et. al. • Presence of aggressive fish • Increase in schooling

  7. Hypothesis The neon tetras would remain further away from the zebra fish when the neon tetras were present in a small school compared to a large group

  8. Materials • Dip net • Aquarium • 500mL Jar • Neon tetras • Zebra fish

  9. Materials • The Aquarium: 1 2 3 4

  10. Materials • The Aquarium: Water temperature maintained at 20⁰C

  11. Methods • Neon tetras placed in aquarium • School sizes: 2 and 8 • Acclimation period of 3 minutes • Jar containing a zebra fish added in section 4

  12. Methods • Scan sampling • Neon tetras in each section recorded every 30 seconds • Total of 15 minutes • 10 replicates for each school size • Control • Empty jar • 5 replicates for each school size

  13. Results • Small school:

  14. Results • Small school: • Chi-square analysis • Experimental: X2(3)= 52.4, p<0.05 • Control: X2(3)= 38.3, p< 0.05 • Significant preference for section 3 • Mann-Whitney U • p >0.9999 • Insignificant difference between control and experimental

  15. Results • Large school:

  16. Results • Large school: • Chi-square analysis • Experimental: X2(3)= 45.3, p< 0.05 • Control: X2(3)= 12.0, p<0.05 • Significant preference for section 3 • Mann-Whitney U • p =0.8857 • Insignificant difference between control and experimental

  17. Discussion • Due to insignificant difference between control and experimental, hypothesis could not be accepted or rejected • Jar was seen as a novel object • Saxby et. al. • Higher prevalence of darting in presence of unfamiliar object when in small schools

  18. Discussion • Predator did not cause neon tetras to stay away • Possible reasons: • Wanted to school with the zebra fish • Zebra fish was not threatening enough • Zebra fish normally school • Separation by the jar • Curiosity of the neon tetras

  19. Discussion • Future avenues of research: • Looking at darting behaviour • Use a more aggressive species • Ex: Angelfish • Using a model predator • Trials without the jar • Collecting more data

  20. Conclusions • No significant difference in the response to the empty jar versus the predator • Neon tetras were attracted to the jar, despite the size of the school • Future improvements to the data collection could provide more useful results

More Related