Data from: Lönnstedt OM, McCormick MI (2013) Ultimate predators: lionfish have evolved to circumvent prey risk assessment abilities. PLoS ONE 8:e75781

Data from: Lönnstedt OM, McCormick MI (2013) Ultimate predators: lionfish have evolved to circumvent prey risk assessment abilities. PLoS ONE 8:e75781.

Abstract [Related Publication]: Invasive species cause catastrophic alterations to communities worldwide by changing the trophic balance within ecosystems. Ever since their introduction in the mid 1980’s common red lionfish, Pterois volitans, are having dramatic impacts on the Caribbean ecosystem by displacing native species and disrupting food webs. Introduced lionfish capture prey at extraordinary rates, altering the composition of benthic communities. Here we demonstrate that the extraordinary success of the introduced lionfish lies in its capacity to circumvent prey risk assessment abilities as it is virtually undetectable by prey species in its native range. While experienced prey damselfish, Chromis viridis, respond with typical antipredator behaviours when exposed to a common predatory rock cod (Cephalopholis microprion) they fail to visibly react to either the scent or visual presentation of the red lionfish, and responded only to the scent (not the visual cue) of a lionfish of a different genus, Dendrochirus zebra. Experienced prey also had much higher survival when exposed to the two non-invasive predators compared to P. volitans. The cryptic nature of the red lionfish has enabled it to be destructive as a predator and a highly successful invasive species.

The full methodology is available in the Open Access publication from the Related Publications link below.

    Data Record Details
    Data record related to this publication Data from: Lönnstedt OM, McCormick MI (2013) Ultimate predators: lionfish have evolved to circumvent prey risk assessment abilities. PLoS ONE 8:e75781
    Data Publication title Data from: Lönnstedt OM, McCormick MI (2013) Ultimate predators: lionfish have evolved to circumvent prey risk assessment abilities. PLoS ONE 8:e75781
  • Description

    Data from: Lönnstedt OM, McCormick MI (2013) Ultimate predators: lionfish have evolved to circumvent prey risk assessment abilities. PLoS ONE 8:e75781.

    Abstract [Related Publication]: Invasive species cause catastrophic alterations to communities worldwide by changing the trophic balance within ecosystems. Ever since their introduction in the mid 1980’s common red lionfish, Pterois volitans, are having dramatic impacts on the Caribbean ecosystem by displacing native species and disrupting food webs. Introduced lionfish capture prey at extraordinary rates, altering the composition of benthic communities. Here we demonstrate that the extraordinary success of the introduced lionfish lies in its capacity to circumvent prey risk assessment abilities as it is virtually undetectable by prey species in its native range. While experienced prey damselfish, Chromis viridis, respond with typical antipredator behaviours when exposed to a common predatory rock cod (Cephalopholis microprion) they fail to visibly react to either the scent or visual presentation of the red lionfish, and responded only to the scent (not the visual cue) of a lionfish of a different genus, Dendrochirus zebra. Experienced prey also had much higher survival when exposed to the two non-invasive predators compared to P. volitans. The cryptic nature of the red lionfish has enabled it to be destructive as a predator and a highly successful invasive species.

    The full methodology is available in the Open Access publication from the Related Publications link below.

  • Other Descriptors
    • Descriptor

      This dataset is available as a spreadsheet in MS Excel (.xlsx) and Open Document formats (.ods)

    • Descriptor type Note
  • Data type dataset
  • Keywords
    • lionfish
    • coral reef fish
    • predator-prey interaction
    • ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
  • Funding source
  • Research grant(s)/Scheme name(s)
  • Research themes
    Tropical Ecosystems, Conservation and Climate Change
    FoR Codes (*)
    SEO Codes
    Specify spatial or temporal setting of the data
    Temporal (time) coverage
  • Start Date 2012/09/01
  • End Date 2012/12/31
  • Time Period
    Spatial (location) coverage
  • Locations
    • Lizard Island Research Station, northern Great Barrier Reef, Australia
  • Related publications
      Name Lönnstedt, Oona M., and McCormick, Mark I. (2013) Ultimate predators: lionfish have evolved to circumvent prey risk assessment abilities. PLoS ONE, 8 (10). pp. 1-8.
    • URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075781
    • Notes Open Access
  • Related websites
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  • Related metadata (including standards, codebooks, vocabularies, thesauri, ontologies)
  • Related data
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    • Notes
    Citation Lonnstedt, Oona; McCormick, Mark (2018): Data from: Lönnstedt OM, McCormick MI (2013) Ultimate predators: lionfish have evolved to circumvent prey risk assessment abilities. PLoS ONE 8:e75781 . James Cook University. https://doi.org/10.4225/28/5a713fd9b1f94