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MEPS prepress abstract   -  DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps14761

Escape ability changes over development in juvenile Japanese eels

Yuha Hasegawa*, Kazuki Mine, Nobuto Fukuda, Kazuki Yokouchi, Yuuki Kawabata

*Corresponding author:

ABSTRACT: Predation is one of the major forces driving the evolution of defensive tactics in prey. Recently, post-capture active escape behaviors of different prey animals from the predator’s digestive tract have been reported. However, no studies have yet examined when these escape behaviors are developed through the ontogeny of the prey. This study examined the ontogenetic change in a unique defensive tactic of juvenile Japanese eels, Anguilla japonica, in which they escape via the predator's gills after being captured, using from pre-settlement glass eels to post-settlement yellow eels (in accordance with their habitat change from tidal estuaries to freshwater rivers). The results indicated that individuals in the two earliest stages of glass eels (VIA0 and VIA1 stages) never escaped after being captured, while 28.1% of individuals after the middle glass eel stages (VIA2 and later stages) escaped via the predator’s gill. The ontogenetic timing of the acquisition of escape ability coincides with when eels settle into benthic riverine and estuarine habitats as suggested by previous studies. Additionally, the pre-capture attack avoidance ability of Japanese eels improved rapidly with growth in the subsequent elver and yellow eel stages. These results suggest that the unique post-capture defensive tactic of eels may be particularly important during the vulnerable period around the settlement phase when they are less capable of avoiding predator attacks. Our study offers valuable insights into the behavioral ecology and the conservation of anguillid eels, which have faced remarkable population declines.