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The Dynamics of Shoaling in Zebrafish

A wide array of species, from ants to humans, live or forage in groups. Shoaling – the formation of groups by fish – confers protection from predation and enhances foraging. However, little is known about the detailed characteristics or the dynamics of shoaling. Shoaling is a complex social interaction and a better understanding of its mechanisms and limitations would permit the study of natural and induced changes on social behavior generally in fish. Here, I present data on the shoaling characteristics of zebrafish (Danio rerio). Novel tracking techniques are used to extract detailed trajectories of all members of a free-swimming shoal of zebrafish. Multiple measures of shoaling – such as distributions of nearest neighbor distances, shoal polarizations, and speeds – are calculated, to better describe the subtleties of the behavior including, for the first time, the high resolution spatio-temporal dynamics of shoaling. In addition, a novel criterion is introduced to determine when and how individual fish or sub-groups leave the shoal. Comparisons are presented between the shoaling characteristics of three populations of zebrafish (LFWT, SFWT, AB) and between days and hours of repeated exposure to the same testing environment, demonstrating the gradual effects of habituation on shoaling. In addition, the effects of manipulating the number of fish in the shoal, hunger levels, and predation threat are also examined, lending empirical support to ecological theories on the adaptive functions of the behavior. Finally, the data are compared to two leading theoretical models of shoaling and a novel simulation approach is suggested. The data strongly suggest that various aspects of shoaling in zebrafish are constantly changing, complex, and flexible, representing a dynamic form of social cognition. The study of these characteristics sheds much-needed light on complex social interactions in this popular genetic model organism, which may eventually lead to a better understanding of social behaviors in other species, including our own.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TORONTO/oai:tspace.library.utoronto.ca:1807/26375
Date23 February 2011
CreatorsMiller, Noam Yosef
ContributorsGerlai, Robert
Source SetsUniversity of Toronto
Languageen_ca
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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