» Articles » PMID: 31263491

Sex Differences in Color Discrimination and Serial Reversal Learning in Mollies and Guppies

Overview
Journal Curr Zool
Date 2019 Jul 3
PMID 31263491
Citations 10
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Behavioral flexibility provides an individual with the ability to adapt its behavior in response to environmental changes. Studies on mammals, birds, and teleosts indicate greater behavioral flexibility in females. Conversely, males appear to exhibit greater behavioral persistence. We, therefore, investigated sex differences in behavioral flexibility in 2 closely related molly species (, ) and their more distant relative, the guppy by comparing male and female individuals in a serial, visual reversal learning task. Fish were first trained in color discrimination, which was quickly learned by all females (guppies and mollies) and all molly males alike. Despite continued training over more than 72 sessions, male guppies did not learn the general test procedure and were, therefore, excluded from further testing. Once the reward contingency was reversed serially, molly males of both species performed considerably better by inhibiting their previous response and reached the learning criterion significantly faster than their respective conspecific females. Moreover, Atlantic molly males clearly outperformed all other individuals (males and females) and some of them even reached the level of 1-trial learning. Thus, the apparently universal pattern of higher female behavioral flexibility seems to be inverted in the 2 examined molly species, although the evolutionary account of this pattern remains highly speculative. These findings were complemented by the observed lower neophobia of female sailfin mollies compared with their male conspecifics. This sex difference was not observed in Atlantic mollies that were observed to be significantly less distressed in a novel situation than their consexuals. Hypothetically, sex differences in behavioral flexibility can possibly be explained in terms of the different roles that males and females play in mating competition, mate choice, and reproduction or, more generally, in complex social interactions. Each of these characteristics clearly differed between the closely related mollies and the more distantly related guppies.

Citing Articles

A reinvestigation of cognitive styles in sticklebacks: decision success varies with behavioral type.

Jones N, Gaffney K, Gardella G, Rowe A, Spence-Jones H, Munson A Behav Ecol. 2024; 36(1):arae097.

PMID: 39664074 PMC: 11631196. DOI: 10.1093/beheco/arae097.


Are lateralized and bold fish optimistic or pessimistic?.

Berlinghieri F, Rizzuto G, Kruizinga L, Riedstra B, Groothuis T, Brown C Anim Cogn. 2024; 27(1):42.

PMID: 38833197 PMC: 11150292. DOI: 10.1007/s10071-024-01876-4.


Assessing cognitive flexibility in humans and rhesus macaques with visual motion and neutral distractors.

Yurt P, Calapai A, Mundry R, Treue S Front Psychol. 2023; 13:1047292.

PMID: 36605264 PMC: 9807625. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.1047292.


Individual differences and knockout in zebrafish reveal similar cognitive effects of BDNF between teleosts and mammals.

Lucon-Xiccato T, Montalbano G, Gatto E, Frigato E, DAniello S, Bertolucci C Proc Biol Sci. 2022; 289(1989):20222036.

PMID: 36541170 PMC: 9768640. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.2036.


Assessing sex differences in behavioural flexibility in an endangered bird species: the Southern ground-hornbill (Bucorvus leadbeateri).

Danel S, Rebout N, Kemp L Anim Cogn. 2022; 26(2):599-609.

PMID: 36251104 DOI: 10.1007/s10071-022-01705-6.


References
1.
Etheredge R, Avenas C, Armstrong M, Cummings M . Sex-specific cognitive-behavioural profiles emerging from individual variation in numerosity discrimination in Gambusia affinis. Anim Cogn. 2017; 21(1):37-53. DOI: 10.1007/s10071-017-1134-2. View

2.
Guillamon A, Valencia A, Cales J, Segovia S . Effects of early postnatal gonadal steroids on the successive conditional discrimination reversal learning in the rat. Physiol Behav. 1986; 38(6):845-9. DOI: 10.1016/0031-9384(86)90052-1. View

3.
Laland , Reader . Foraging innovation in the guppy. Anim Behav. 1999; 57(2):331-340. DOI: 10.1006/anbe.1998.0967. View

4.
Sommer-Trembo C, Plath M . Consistent individual differences in associative learning speed are not linked to boldness in female Atlantic mollies. Anim Cogn. 2018; 21(5):661-670. DOI: 10.1007/s10071-018-1201-3. View

5.
HUGHES , Blight . Two intertidal fish species use visual association learning to track the status of food patches in a radial maze. Anim Behav. 2000; 59(3):613-621. DOI: 10.1006/anbe.1999.1351. View