Tropical fishes can benefit more from novel than familiar species interactions at their cold‐range edges
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(Published version)
Date
2025
Authors
Mitchell, A.
Hayes, C.
Coni, E.O.C.
Booth, D.J.
Nagelkerken, I.
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Journal of Animal Ecology, 2025; 94(10):1997-2010
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Angus Mitchell, Chloe Hayes, Ericka O. C. Coni, David J. Booth, Ivan Nagelkerken
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Abstract
1. Animals extending their biogeographic ranges poleward under global warming often interact with local species for limited resources such as food and shelter. Whether such novel species interactions facilitate or inhibit range extensions remains largely unknown. 2. We evaluated how range-extending tropical and co-shoaling temperate fishes modify their behaviours (aggression, foraging and anti-predator) along a 2000-km latitudinal gradient encapsulating tropical, subtropical and temperate reefs in a global ocean warming hotspot. 3. All five tropical fish species showed increased anti-predator behaviours and decreased bite rate at their novel temperate range compared to their native tropical and subtropical ranges. However, when shoaling with temperate fishes, three of five tropical fish species had higher bite rates and all five tropical fish species spent less time sheltering compared to tropical-only shoals, irrespective of biogeographic region. 4. In their subtropical ranges, tropical fish were more aggressive towards co-shoaling temperate fish compared to their poleward novel cold ranges. This increased tropical fish aggression resulted in increased fleeing responses by the two temperate fishes at their subtropical warm trailing edges compared to their warm-and cold-temperate core ranges. 5. Our findings suggest that tropical fish species trade-off foraging efficiency for anti-predator behaviour in their novel warm-and cold-temperate ranges, independent of shoaling interactions. 6. However, shoaling with temperate species can increase the foraging efficiency of tropical fishes, which may be a mechanism (phenotypic plasticity) that enhances their performance at their leading temperate range edges. 7. Since novel species interactions enhanced the behavioural performance of some tropical fishes, we conclude that behavioural interactions between range-extending and local species can facilitate successful range extensions of some species into novel environments.
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First published: 23 July 2025
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© 2025 The Author(s). Journal of Animal Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Ecological Society. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.