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Rapid evolution of coordinated and collective movement in response to artificial selection

Authors :
Audrey Le Foll
Alexander Kotrschal
James E. Herbert-Read
Kristiaan Pelckmans
Judith E. Mank
Maksym Romenskyy
Niclas Kolm
David J. T. Sumpter
Natasha I. Bloch
Ada Fontrodona Eslava
Séverine D. Buechel
Laura Sánchez Alòs
A. Szorkovszky
Hong-Li Zeng
Ganaël Braux
University of St Andrews. Centre for Biological Diversity
University of St Andrews. School of Biology
Kotrschal, Alexander [0000-0003-3473-1402]
Szorkovszky, Alexander [0000-0001-9331-3214]
Herbert-Read, James [0000-0003-0243-4518]
Bloch, Natasha I [0000-0002-4769-1027]
Romenskyy, Maksym [0000-0003-2565-4994]
Eslava, Ada Fontrodona [0000-0001-7275-7174]
Zeng, Hongli [0000-0003-1764-4657]
Braux, Ganaël [0000-0001-5485-1378]
Pelckmans, Kristiaan [0000-0002-8486-0897]
Kolm, Niclas [0000-0001-5791-336X]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Science Advances, 6(49), Science Advances 6 (2020) 49, Science Advances
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The rules of interaction that animals use to coordinate their movements are heritable and can evolve rapidly.<br />Collective motion occurs when individuals use social interaction rules to respond to the movements and positions of their neighbors. How readily these social decisions are shaped by selection remains unknown. Through artificial selection on fish (guppies, Poecilia reticulata) for increased group polarization, we demonstrate rapid evolution in how individuals use social interaction rules. Within only three generations, groups of polarization-selected females showed a 15% increase in polarization, coupled with increased cohesiveness, compared to fish from control lines. Although lines did not differ in their physical swimming ability or exploratory behavior, polarization-selected fish adopted faster speeds, particularly in social contexts, and showed stronger alignment and attraction responses to multiple neighbors. Our results reveal the social interaction rules that change when collective behavior evolves.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23752548
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Advances, 6(49), Science Advances 6 (2020) 49, Science Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ee9b976ce487df020c2b474640c297f1