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Sex-specific effects of psychoactive pollution on behavioral individuality and plasticity in fish
Summary
Researchers exposed guppies to the antidepressant fluoxetine across multiple generations and found that the drug altered behavioral individuality and flexibility differently in males versus females. Males showed reduced variation in activity levels, while females maintained more behavioral diversity but changed their stress responses. The study suggests that pharmaceutical pollution in waterways may subtly reshape animal behavior in ways that differ between sexes, with potential consequences for population adaptability.
The global rise of pharmaceutical contaminants in the aquatic environment poses a serious threat to ecological and evolutionary processes. Studies have traditionally focused on the collateral (average) effects of psychoactive pollutants on ecologically relevant behaviors of wildlife, often neglecting effects among and within individuals, and whether they differ between males and females. We tested whether psychoactive pollutants have sex-specific effects on behavioral individuality and plasticity in guppies (<i>Poecilia reticulata</i>), a freshwater species that inhabits contaminated waterways in the wild. Fish were exposed to fluoxetine (Prozac) for 2 years across multiple generations before their activity and stress-related behavior were repeatedly assayed. Using a Bayesian statistical approach that partitions the effects among and within individuals, we found that males-but not females-in fluoxetine-exposed populations differed less from each other in their behavior (lower behavioral individuality) than unexposed males. In sharp contrast, effects on behavioral plasticity were observed in females-but not in males-whereby exposure to even low levels of fluoxetine resulted in a substantial decrease (activity) and increase (freezing behavior) in the behavioral plasticity of females. Our evidence reveals that psychoactive pollution has sex-specific effects on the individual behavior of fish, suggesting that males and females might not be equally vulnerable to global pollutants.
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