Aneesh P.H. Bose
McMaster University
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Featured researches published by Aneesh P.H. Bose.
Animal Behaviour | 2014
Aneesh P.H. Bose; Karen M. Cogliati; Holly S. Howe; Sigal Balshine
Cannibalism of young is a common yet seemingly paradoxical phenomenon observed across a wide variety of taxa. Understanding this behaviour in the context of parental care remains a challenge for evolutionary biologists. A common adaptive explanation for the consumption of offspring is that it serves to increase the current or future reproductive success or survival of the cannibalistic parent by replenishing energy stores and facilitating continued care for any remaining young. Another explanation is that cannibalism may be a competitive response to cuckoldry or lowered certainty of parentage. We tested these ideas using the plainfin midshipman fish, Porichthys notatus, a species with an extended period of male-only parental care and documented offspring cannibalism. We found that the occurrence of cannibalism was not linked to the deterioration of body condition, but instead was most frequent during periods of high intrasexual competition and nest take-overs. Our results suggest that cannibalism is not driven by the energetic demands of parental care, but instead by competition among males for nests and females, and the resulting low paternity stemming from both nest take-overs and cuckoldry.
Royal Society Open Science | 2017
Shagun Jindal; Aneesh P.H. Bose; Constance M. O'Connor; Sigal Balshine
Infanticide and offspring cannibalism are taxonomically widespread phenomena. In some group-living species, a new dominant individual taking over a group can benefit from infanticide if doing so induces potential mates to become reproductively available sooner. Despite widespread observations of infanticide (i.e. egg cannibalism) among fishes, no study has investigated whether egg cannibalism occurs in fishes as a result of group takeovers, or how this type of cannibalism might be adaptive. Using the cooperatively breeding cichlid, Neolamprologus pulcher, we tested whether new unrelated males entering the dominant position in a social group were more likely to cannibalize eggs, and whether such cannibalism would shorten the interval until the females next spawning. Females spawned again sooner if their broods were removed than if they were cared for. Egg cannibalism occurred frequently after a group takeover event, and was rarer if the original male remained with the group. While dominant breeder females were initially highly aggressive towards newcomer males that took over the group, the degree of resistance depended on relative body size differences between the new pair and, ultimately, female aggression did not prevent egg cannibalism. Egg cannibalism, however, did not shorten the duration until subsequent spawning, or increase fecundity during subsequent breeding in our laboratory setting. Our results show that infanticide as mediated through group takeovers is a taxonomically widespread behaviour.
Behavioral Ecology | 2018
Aneesh P.H. Bose; Karen M. Cogliati; Nick Luymes; Andrew H. Bass; Margaret A. Marchaterre; Joseph A. Sisneros; Benjamin M. Bolker; Sigal Balshine; Michael Taborsky
In nature, it can be challenging to figure out whether success at attracting mates and reproducing is due to something intrinsic about an individual or something about the quality of the resources they possess. In a series of lab and field studies using the plainfin midshipman fish, we show that both factors are complex and that resource quality can impose a limit on reproductive success regardless of the quality of the resource owner.
Journal of Fish Biology | 2018
Aneesh P.H. Bose; Erin S. McCallum; Kate Raymond; Julie R. Marentette; Sigal Balshine
Round goby Neogobius melanostomus sagittal (saccular) otolith morphology was compared between males of the two alternative reproductive tactics (termed guarder and sneaker males) and between males captured from sites of high or low contamination. Otolith size increased with fish size and also displayed an ontogenetic shift in shape, becoming relatively taller as otoliths grew in size. Despite a considerable overlap in age between males adopting the two reproductive tactics, size-at-age measurements revealed that guarder males are significantly larger than sneakers at any given age and that they invest more into somatic growth than sneaker males. Controlling for body size, sneaker males possessed heavier sagittal otoliths than guarder males. Subtle otolith shape differences were also found between the two male tactics and between sites of high and low contaminant exposure. Sneaker males had relatively shorter otoliths with more pronounced notching than guarder males. Fish captured at sites of high contamination had otoliths showing slower growth rates in relation to body size and their shapes had more pronounced caudal points and ventral protrusions when compared with fish captured at sites of low contamination. The results are discussed in relation to life-history tradeoffs between the male tactics in terms of reproductive and somatic investment as well as the putative metabolic costs of exposure to contaminants. Overall, this study reveals that male alternative reproductive tactics and environmental contaminants can have small, yet measurable, effects on otolith morphology and these factors should be accounted for in future research when possible.
Behavioral Ecology | 2016
Aneesh P.H. Bose; Grant B. McClelland; Sigal Balshine
Chemosphere | 2017
Erin S. McCallum; Aneesh P.H. Bose; Theresa R. Warriner; Sigal Balshine
Journal of Fish Biology | 2017
Aneesh P.H. Bose; J. B. Adragna; Sigal Balshine
Behavioral Ecology | 2016
Aneesh P.H. Bose; Henry H. Kou; Sigal Balshine
Archive | 2018
Aneesh P.H. Bose; Karen M. Cogliati; Nick Luymes; Andrew H. Bass; Margaret A. Marchaterre; Joseph A. Sisneros; Benjamin M. Bolker; Sigal Balshine
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2018
William D. Halliday; Matthew K. Pine; Aneesh P.H. Bose; Sigal Balshine; Francis Juanes