Fitzpatrick and Borges craft a tale of growing up guppy in Ecology Letters
Nature is full of big questions that are easy to ask and hard to answer. With some good old-fashioned hard work and help from a humble, gilled vertebrate, though, EEB core faculty member Sarah Fitzpatrick and PhD candidate Isabela Lima Borges, have made headway on one of those mysteries.
They helmed an extensive study of Trinidadian guppies to gather elusive data on relatively short swims. This information can help explain the larger mystery of why some individuals leave the safety of home to pursue life elsewhere.
“Traveling can be dangerous and it takes energy. Given all the risks, why do things move around at all?” said Fitzpatrick, an assistant professor of integrative biology in the College of Natural Science based at W. K. Kellogg Biological Station, or KBS. “It’s such a fundamental part of ecology that we know so little about.”
Answers to this question relied largely on theories, but thanks to a new study published in the journal Ecology Letters on Nov. 25, the team provided concrete data to back these up.
The data are also valuable from a conservation standpoint, said Borges, the first author of the new
study and a graduate student researcher in the Department of Integrative Biology, also at KBS. By revealing more about an animal’s natural behavior, researchers can better spot when human activity starts to change it.
The team showed that although most guppies stayed put throughout their lives, males that ventured off were more likely to have offspring than their homebody counterparts. Females tended to move less and also saw no advantage to moving more. Still, there was a clear reward for males that swam the coop.
“We get the chicken and the egg,” said Borges. “We see that males move more and that males benefit more from moving.”
This wasn’t a total surprise. Theory suggests that because staying in one’s home is often safer — for example, there’s a lower risk of being eaten — there must be an advantage to traveling. Otherwise, why leave? But the data to confirm the benefits were scant.
“What we did was go further and track advantages for guppies that left home,” said Fitzpatrick, who is the coordinator of the KBS Molecular Ecology and Genomics Lab. “It’s cool to see a result that makes sense.”
Though the reproductive exploits of the unassuming guppy may not seem like big news, they can inform how other species answer the should-I-stay-or-should-I-go question.
“Although this is a study of one species, there are many broader theories that can be informed by it,” said Borges. “For example, we expect to see this behavior in other species that don’t have male parental care.”
These broader implications are made possible by the Trinidadian guppy’s special place in science. The fish live in streams throughout Trinidad and each stream presents the guppies that call it home with slightly different conditions. Thus, the different streams are almost like different iterations of the same natural experiment, Borges said.
Because of this, scientists have studied the fish for decades and have established the guppy as a model organism. With a wealth of history and knowledge at their disposal, scientists can use what they learn about guppies to inform their understanding of larger motifs in the natural world.
It’s similar to how scientists have long relied on fruit flies to test ideas about genetics and evolution in the lab, Fitzpatrick said, with a few notable differences. Guppies have backbones and scientists can study them in the wild with relative ease.
“I tell people that guppies are the fruit fly of the vertebrate world,” said Fitzpatrick, “With them, we can study evolution in action in natural environments.”
That said, the study was still intensive. “This was super hard and this is an ‘easy’ species to study,” Borges said, which helps explain, in part, why such robust data hadn’t been available before.
Working with collaborators at Colorado State University and the University of Texas at Austin, the researchers “tattooed” about 1,300 guppies. The researchers essentially color-coded individual fish with small injectable tags to track the guppies’ movements.
See the full story in MSU Today.