Frequency-dependent success of aggressive mimics in a cleaning symbiosis
Open Access
- 4 October 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 272 (1581) , 2635-2639
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2005.3256
Abstract
Batesian mimics—palatable organisms that resemble unpalatable ones—are usually maintained in populations by frequency-dependent selection. We tested whether this mechanism was also responsible for the maintenance of aggressive mimicry in natural populations of coral reef fishes. The attack success of bluestriped fangblennies (Plagiotremus rhinorhynchos), which mimic juvenile bluestreaked cleaner wrasses (Labroides dimidiatus) in colour but tear flesh and scales from fishes instead of removing ectoparasites, was frequency-dependent, increasing as mimics became rarer relative to their model. However, cleaner mimics were also more successful on reefs with higher densities of potential victims, perhaps because a dilution-like effect creates few opportunities for potential victims to learn to avoid mimics. Further studies should reveal whether this second mechanism is specific to aggressive mimicry.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mutualism or parasitism? The variable outcome of cleaning symbiosesBiology Letters, 2005
- Choosing when to be a cleaner-fish mimicNature, 2005
- Distance–dependent costs and benefits of aggressive mimicry in a cleaning symbiosisProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2004
- Mimicry in coral reef fishes: ecological and behavioural responses of a mimic to its modelJournal of Zoology, 2004
- Experimental confirmation of aggressive mimicry by a coral reef fishOecologia, 2004
- From parasitism to mutualism: partner control in asymmetric interactionsEcology Letters, 2002
- Cleaning activity of two Caribbean cleaning gobies: intra‐ and interspecific comparisonsJournal of Fish Biology, 2002
- Mathematical Models of MimicryThe American Naturalist, 1988
- Studies of Warning Coloration and Mimicry. IV. A. Mathematical Model of Model‐Mimic FrequenciesEcology, 1964
- A DISTRIBUTION-FREE k-SAMPLE TEST AGAINST ORDERED ALTERNATIVESBiometrika, 1954