Test of the prey-attraction hypothesis for the scorpion fluorescence

A striking feature of most scorpion species is fluorescence under ultraviolet light, but few studies have investigated the adaptive benefit of this trait. A hypothesis is that fluorescence may lure prey towards the scorpion improving foraging success. In this study, we investigated whether the fluor...

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Main Authors: Dumas Gálvez, Carolina Nieto, Paola Samaniego
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-01-01
Series:Neotropical Biodiversity
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23766808.2020.1844991
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spelling doaj-2d3980c4b73f4952b816b7702b39e1e22021-03-18T16:25:25ZengTaylor & Francis GroupNeotropical Biodiversity2376-68082020-01-016117217710.1080/23766808.2020.18449911844991Test of the prey-attraction hypothesis for the scorpion fluorescenceDumas Gálvez0Carolina Nieto1Paola Samaniego2Universidad de Panamá, Estafeta UniversitariaUniversidad de PanamáUniversidad de PanamáA striking feature of most scorpion species is fluorescence under ultraviolet light, but few studies have investigated the adaptive benefit of this trait. A hypothesis is that fluorescence may lure prey towards the scorpion improving foraging success. In this study, we investigated whether the fluorescence of the scorpion Centruroides granosus Thorell, 1876 lures the house cricket Acheta domesticus Linnaeus, 1758. We performed two experiments: 1) an arena in which crickets were exposed to both fluorescing and black-painted non-fluorescing scorpions and 2) a tunnel in which crickets could walk out through one of the two exits, each with a scorpion treatment. None of the experiments provided evidence that the scorpion fluorescence is attractive to house crickets since they did not show preference for any of the two scorpion types. Variables such as cricket sex or scorpion sex did not influence their response towards the fluorescence; however, crickets were on average closer to male scorpions in the outdoor arena and closer to female scorpions in the laboratory arenas. Moreover, male crickets were more active than females in the tunnel experiment, in line with the results of the arena experiment showing that male crickets were on average closer to the scorpions in the laboratory. We discuss potential implications and suggest that more experimental work is required to investigate potential adaptive benefits of the scorpion fluorescence under various biotic and abiotic factors.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23766808.2020.1844991buthidaeforagingpredatorscorpionsuv light
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dumas Gálvez
Carolina Nieto
Paola Samaniego
spellingShingle Dumas Gálvez
Carolina Nieto
Paola Samaniego
Test of the prey-attraction hypothesis for the scorpion fluorescence
Neotropical Biodiversity
buthidae
foraging
predator
scorpions
uv light
author_facet Dumas Gálvez
Carolina Nieto
Paola Samaniego
author_sort Dumas Gálvez
title Test of the prey-attraction hypothesis for the scorpion fluorescence
title_short Test of the prey-attraction hypothesis for the scorpion fluorescence
title_full Test of the prey-attraction hypothesis for the scorpion fluorescence
title_fullStr Test of the prey-attraction hypothesis for the scorpion fluorescence
title_full_unstemmed Test of the prey-attraction hypothesis for the scorpion fluorescence
title_sort test of the prey-attraction hypothesis for the scorpion fluorescence
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Neotropical Biodiversity
issn 2376-6808
publishDate 2020-01-01
description A striking feature of most scorpion species is fluorescence under ultraviolet light, but few studies have investigated the adaptive benefit of this trait. A hypothesis is that fluorescence may lure prey towards the scorpion improving foraging success. In this study, we investigated whether the fluorescence of the scorpion Centruroides granosus Thorell, 1876 lures the house cricket Acheta domesticus Linnaeus, 1758. We performed two experiments: 1) an arena in which crickets were exposed to both fluorescing and black-painted non-fluorescing scorpions and 2) a tunnel in which crickets could walk out through one of the two exits, each with a scorpion treatment. None of the experiments provided evidence that the scorpion fluorescence is attractive to house crickets since they did not show preference for any of the two scorpion types. Variables such as cricket sex or scorpion sex did not influence their response towards the fluorescence; however, crickets were on average closer to male scorpions in the outdoor arena and closer to female scorpions in the laboratory arenas. Moreover, male crickets were more active than females in the tunnel experiment, in line with the results of the arena experiment showing that male crickets were on average closer to the scorpions in the laboratory. We discuss potential implications and suggest that more experimental work is required to investigate potential adaptive benefits of the scorpion fluorescence under various biotic and abiotic factors.
topic buthidae
foraging
predator
scorpions
uv light
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23766808.2020.1844991
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AT carolinanieto testofthepreyattractionhypothesisforthescorpionfluorescence
AT paolasamaniego testofthepreyattractionhypothesisforthescorpionfluorescence
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