Latest Events

Topic: 
Dance or disappear: Strategic sexual signalling in female Peninsular rock agama Psammophilus dorsalis
Speaker: 
Aravind Sridharan, IIsc, Bangalore
Date & Time: 
8 Jun 2022 - 3:00pm
Event Type: 
Thesis Progress
Venue: 
CES Seminar Hall, 3rd Floor, Biological Sciences Building
Abstract:

Sexual selection in polygynous mating systems has largely been studied in the context of female mate choice and competition in males. There is empirical evidence on how males strategize their investment in costly displays. More recently, studies have observed sexual signalling in females, however, our understanding of how females invest in such costly signals is limited. Male Peninsular rock agama Psammophilus dorsalis show diverse displays in the context of competitions and courtship. Recent studies indicate that females also use complex displays during the breeding season. Here we test the hypothesis that females invest more in sexual signalling when there is reduced availability of mating opportunities with high-quality males. We also test whether females increase their sexual signalling through the breeding season to maximize terminal-mating opportunities. We caught and tagged wild female lizards and released them back into their territories. On these lizards, we carried out model presentation trials, where 3D printed models of a male lizard in breeding and non-breeding colours were presented following which, the initial response of the focal lizard was recorded. We have conducted and recorded 129 trials across three breeding seasons between 2019 and 2021. Preliminary analysis shows that females display using dynamic colour change and body postures in response to male models in breeding colour. This paper investigates how female Peninsular rock agama strategizes their investment in sexual signals based on various intrinsic factors, social conditions and life-history trade-offs.

Topic: 
Oil Palms and the Future of India's Biodiversity
Speaker: 
Umesh Srinivasan, IIsc, Bangalore
Date & Time: 
30 Mar 2022 - 3:00pm
Event Type: 
CES Buzz
Venue: 
CES Seminar Hall, 3rd Floor, Biological Sciences Building
Abstract:

India is the world’s largest consumer and importer of palm oil. In an aggressive push towards self-sufficiency in vegetable oils, the Indian government is prioritising the rapid expansion of domestic oil palm plantations to meet an expected doubling in palm oil consumption in the next fifteen years. Yet the current expansion of oil palm in India is occurring at the expense of biodiversity-rich landscapes. Using a spatially explicit model, we show that at the national scale, India appears to have viable options to satisfy its projected national demand for palm oil without compromising either its biodiversity or its food security. At finer spatial scales, India’s oil palm expansion needs to incorporate region-specific contingencies and account for trade-offs between biodiversity conservation, climate change, agricultural inputs and economic and social security. The policy decisions that India takes with respect to oil palm can significantly reduce future pressures to convert forests to oil palm plantations in the tropics globally.

Topic: 
 Defensive shimmering responses in the giant honeybee Apis dorsata Apis dorsata
Speaker: 
Sajesh Vijayan, IISER Thiruvananthapuram
Date & Time: 
16 Mar 2022 - 3:00pm
Event Type: 
Invited Seminar
Venue: 
CES Seminar Hall, 3rd Floor, Biological Sciences Building
Abstract:

Due to the absence of physical barriers, the open-nesting giant honeybee Apis dorsata has evolved a spectacular collective defence behaviour – known as “shimmering” – against predators, which is characterised by travelling waves generated by individual bees flipping their abdomens in a coordinated and sequential manner across the bee curtain. We examined if shimmering is visually-mediated by presenting moving stimuli of varying sizes and contrasts to the background (dark or light) in bright and dim ambient light conditions. Shimmering was strongest under bright ambient light, and its strength declined in dim-light. A. dorsata shimmered only when presented with the darkest stimulus against a light background, but not when this condition was reversed (light stimulus against dark background). We suggest that this is an effective anti-predatory strategy in open-nesting A. dorsata colonies, exposed to high ambient light, as flying predators are more easily detected when they appear as dark moving objects against a bright sky. Moreover, the stimulus detection threshold (smallest visual angular size) is much smaller in this anti-predatory context (1.6° - 3.4°) than in the context of foraging (5.7°), indicating that ecological context affects visual detection threshold.

Topic: 
Effect of Boundary On Collective Movement of Animal Groups
Speaker: 
Pritha Kundu, IIsc, Bangalore
Date & Time: 
7 Jan 2022 - 12:00pm
Event Type: 
Thesis Defense
Venue: 
Online
Abstract:

Many biological systems, from flocks of birds, swarms of locusts, shoals of fish, to crowds of humans show collective behaviours which are emergent properties that manifest only at the level of a group. In each of these cases, local, individual-level interactions give rise to highly coordinated and synchronized emergent patterns that are observable at the group level. Theoretical, computational, and empirical research in this field have been used to address questions about various aspects of collective behaviour, from characterizing its structural and dynamical properties to deciphering how the individual behaviour produces emergent group patterns. However, most of these studies examine the group-level properties in terms of their mean values and do not attempt to characterize the variability present in the collective properties which arise due to the stochastic fluctuations. In real groups, stochastic fluctuations in the group-level properties arise due to the probabilistic interactions between finite number of individuals. As a result, this intrinsic noise present in collective systems can produce non-intuitive and non-trivial behaviours. Real groups in finite space will likely have some interaction with the boundary, and the observed collective dynamics may also include effects of interaction with the boundary. To gain comprehensive understanding of collective dynamics in real groups, examining the effect of interaction with the boundary is necessary. However, whether boundary interactions confound analyses of inferred interaction rules have not been investigated rigorously. In the current study, we examine how the parameters of the boundary conditions affect the simulated collective dynamics. We performed stochastic simulations of two data-inspired spatial models developed by Jhawar et al. that have contrasting collective properties: (i) where individuals show pairwise interactions and collective order is driven stochastically (ii) where individuals show ternary interactions and collective order is driven deterministically. We characterize intrinsic noise in the data generated from the simulations and examine the susceptibility of the results to the presence of boundary. In these data-inspired spatial models, we show that the essential features of the group-level dynamics obtained from the simulated time-series do not change because of boundary interactions. Furthermore, our inference of local interactions also remains unaffected by the boundary conditions – at least within the model framework and the context we investigated, which were parameterized to the experimental conditions of our laboratory.

Topic: 
Who benefits in bacteria-amoebae symbioses?
Speaker: 
Joan E. Strassmann, Charles Rebstock Professor of Biology, Washington University St. Louis, USA
Date & Time: 
10 Nov 2021 - 7:00pm
Event Type: 
Invited Seminar
Venue: 
Online
Abstract:

When a blackbird swallows an earthworm, there is little doubt about the nature of the interaction. Sadly, few microbial interactions are this clear. This is particularly true when bacteria reside inside eukaryotes. Who gains, who loses, and the role of evolution are large questions in the biology of microbial interactions. Many look at the mechanisms of interaction, but here we take a different approach. First we explore the landscape of interactions across the eastern US, determining how commonly specific bacteria interact with amoebae, beginning with the obligate endosymbionts Amoebophilis and Neoclamydia and the eukaryote host Dictyostelium discoideum. We image the interactions and measure health effects on the host. Then we turn to a novel facultative endosymbiont, Paraburkholderia spp. where geographic distribution and health effects can be measured for both host and endosymbiont. We name three new species, two of which are highly dependent on the host and then use experimental evolution techniques to reveal how tightly they have co-evolved. Combining the tools of landscape surveys, microscopy, fitness assays, genomics, and experimental evolution allow a much deeper understanding of host-pathogen or host-mutualist interactions.

Topic: 
Ground-dwelling arthropods across human land use: Interpreting the spatial and temporal dimensions of beta diversity
Speaker: 
Pranoy Baidya, IIsc, Bangalore
Date & Time: 
4 Oct 2021 - 3:00pm
Event Type: 
Thesis Colloquium
Venue: 
Online
Abstract:

This study investigates beta diversity and its partitions to quantify the influence of different processes that drive spatial and temporal variation in ground-dwelling arthropod assemblages. First, ant assemblages across Goa, India, were studied to quantify how different species and functional groups, and human land use contribute to beta diversity over large spatial scales, and whether invasive species have a disproportionate influence on beta diversity. Human land use strongly influenced diversity and distribution of ant assemblages. Human land use spared local species richness, but not functional groups. A small number of invasive species exerted negative influence even in a very speciose community. Second, intra-annual variation in beta diversity and its partitions of ant communities was studied across three seasons in Bhagwan Mahaveer Wildlife Sanctuary, Goa, India, to quantify how loss and gain of species leads to functional redundancy. Ant community composition was highly variable at seasonal scales. But ecological roles were maintained across seasons by species with redundant functional traits. Third, effect of human altered land use on temporal beta diversity and its partitions of ground active arthropods was quantified in the coupled human-natural Trans-Himalayan ecosystem in Spiti, northern India. Human land use altered seasonal trajectories of community dynamics and influenced beta diversity at the taxonomic level. But functional roles were spared due to species replacement and redundancy in traits. Together, the three chapters of this thesis show that community composition rather than species richness is a better indicator of how arthropods respond to human land use. They also establish functional redundancy to be an important feature of ecological resilience and resistance that can be affected by human land use.

Topic: 
Effect of Boundary On Collective Movement of Animal Groups
Speaker: 
Pritha Kundu, IIsc, Bangalore
Date & Time: 
16 Sep 2021 - 11:30am
Event Type: 
Thesis Colloquium
Venue: 
Online
Abstract:

Many biological systems, from flocks of birds, swarms of locusts, shoals of fish, to crowds of humans show collective behaviours which are emergent properties that manifest only at the level of a group. In each of these cases, local, individual-level interactions give rise to highly coordinated and synchronized emergent patterns that are observable at the group level. Theoretical, computational, and empirical research in this field have been used to address questions about various aspects of collective behaviour, from characterizing its structural and dynamical properties to deciphering how the individual behaviour produces emergent group patterns. However, most of these studies examine the group-level properties in terms of their mean values and do not attempt to characterize the variability present in the collective properties which arise due to the stochastic fluctuations. In real groups, stochastic fluctuations in the group-level properties arise due to the probabilistic interactions between finite number of individuals. As a result, this intrinsic noise present in collective systems can produce non-intuitive and non-trivial behaviours. Real groups in finite space will likely have some interaction with the boundary, and the observed collective dynamics may also include effects of interaction with the boundary. To gain comprehensive understanding of collective dynamics in real groups, examining the effect of interaction with the boundary is necessary. However, whether boundary interactions confound analyses of inferred interaction rules have not been investigated rigorously. In the current study, we examine how the parameters of the boundary conditions affect the simulated collective dynamics. We performed stochastic simulations of two data-inspired spatial models developed by Jhawar et al. that have contrasting collective properties: (i) where individuals show pairwise interactions and collective order is driven stochastically (ii) where individuals show ternary interactions and collective order is driven deterministically. We characterize intrinsic noise in the data generated from the simulations and examine the susceptibility of the results to the presence of boundary. In these data-inspired spatial models, we show that the essential features of the group-level dynamics obtained from the simulated time-series do not change because of boundary interactions. Furthermore, our inference of local interactions also remains unaffected by the boundary conditions – at least within the model framework and the context we investigated, which were parameterized to the experimental conditions of our laboratory.

Topic: 
Collective motion and mechanisms of swimming coordination in fish schools
Speaker: 
Dr. Guy Theraulaz, Centre de Recherches sur la Cognition Animale, Centre de Biologie Intégrative, CNRS, UMR 5169, Université Paul Sabatier, France
Date & Time: 
19 Oct 2022 - 3:00pm
Event Type: 
Invited Seminar
Venue: 
CES Seminar Hall, 3rd Floor, Biological Sciences Building
Coffee/Tea: 
Before the talk
Abstract:

Schools of fish and flocks of birds display an impressive variety of collective movement patterns that emerge from local interactions among group members. These collective phenomena raise a variety of questions about the interactions rules that govern the coordination of individuals’ motions and the emergence of large-scale patterns. While numerous models have been proposed, there is still a strong need for detailed experimental studies to foster the biological understanding of such collective motion phenomena. I will first describe the methods that we developed in the recent years to characterize social interactions between individuals involved in the coordination of swimming in groups of Rummy-nose tetra (Hemigrammus rhodostomus) from data gathered at the individual scale. This species of tropical fish performs burst-and-coast swimming behavior that consists of sudden heading changes combined with brief accelerations followed by quasi-passive, straight decelerations. Our results show that both attraction and alignment behaviors control the reaction of fish to a neighbor. Then I will present how these results can be used to build a model of spontaneous burst-and-coast swimming and social interactions of fish, with all parameters being estimated or directly measured from experiments. This model shows that the simple addition of the pairwise interactions with two neighbors quantitatively reproduces the collective behavior observed in groups of fish. Increasing the number of interacting neighbors does not significantly improve the simulation results. Remarkably, and even without confinement, we find that groups remain cohesive and polarized when each fish interacts with only one of its neighbors: the one that has the strongest contribution to the heading variation of the focal fish, dubbed as the “most influential neighbor". Overall, our results suggest that fish avoid information overload when they move in large groups since individuals only have to acquire a minimal amount of information about the behavior of their neighbors for coordinating their movements.

Topic: 
Honeydew politics: Investigating the processes structuring ant-Hemipteran mutualisms across a land-use gradient
Speaker: 
Pranav Balasubramanian, IIsc, Bangalore
Date & Time: 
6 Oct 2022 - 10:00am
Event Type: 
Departmental Seminar
Venue: 
CES Seminar Hall, 3rd Floor, Biological Sciences Building
Coffee/Tea: 
Before the talk
Abstract:

Mutualisms are known to play a variety of roles in structuring communities and ecosystems. While obligate mutualisms can irreplaceably shape community composition, facultative mutualisms can also play a variety of roles such as in aiding recovery from stressful conditions, accelerating ecosystem processes and modulating the balance between multiple ecosystem processes. Ant-Hemipteran mutualisms are largely facultative, food-reward/protection-driven mutualisms in which ants “tend” many species of insects across unrelated groups of the order Hemiptera including aphids, scale insects, treehoppers and leaf-footed bugs. Honeydew, the excreted product of sap consumption by Hemipterans, is the food-reward to ants in exchange for reduced predation pressure arising from close proximity with ants. The widely context-variant mechanisms and outcomes involved have been well-elucidated in smaller-scale studies of a few species at a time. However, much less is known about the overall diversity of these mutualisms at a single site, and how this diversity impacts their functioning. This is expected to matter in many natural settings, as most species involved are generalists, each interacting with a diverse suite of partners.

 

I will investigate the patterns and processes structuring ant-Hemipteran mutualisms at a landscape scale across three land use types - grasslands, forests and heavily-logged forests, within Sonai-Rupai Wildlife Sanctuary in Assam. In my first Chapter, I will examine participation in mutualisms by comparing patterns of ant-Hemipteran-host plant networks across the three habitats. I will also consider what can be inferred about the processes shaping participation from the structure of interaction networks alone. In Chapter 2, I will compare three different methods of sampling ant-Hemipteran interactions for purposes of the previous chapter across the land use gradient. This will provide a greater appreciation of the challenges that may be involved in sampling these patchily-distributed interactions in widely differing environments. I will begin Chapter 3 by characterizing mutualisms based on a set of easily observable ecological properties, comment on their relevance and then ask how species traits influence these properties. In my final Chapter, I will perform cafeteria experiments using baits to understand how nutritional balances and competitive dominance and discovery hierarchies influence the use of Hemipteran tending as resources by ants across the land-use types.

Topic: 
Fishes do fear the reaper: Anthropogenic fear in coral reef systems
Speaker: 
Shawn Dsouza, IISc, Bangalore
Date & Time: 
27 Sep 2022 - 10:00am
Event Type: 
Departmental Seminar
Venue: 
CES Seminar Hall, 3rd Floor, Biological Sciences Building
Coffee/Tea: 
Before the talk
Abstract:

Prey species perceive the risk of encountering predators and being predated upon as fear in the landscape. Prey can thus implement behavioral antipredator strategies by altering functional traits such as habitat use, foraging time, and forage choice. Several factors can affect prey perception of predation risk in the landscape, also known as the landscape of fear, including predator traits, prey traits, and habitat characteristics. Humans may also play the role of predators in natural ecosystems. Both predator and prey species may perceive the threat of humans as predation risk, thus generating fear across trophic levels. Over the past century, most predator species have been extirpated from terrestrial and marine systems. Accordingly, humans may also alter the natural landscape of fear indirectly. Here, I attempt to understand how anthropogenic fear qualitatively and quantitatively differs from fear of other predator species. I plan to use a combination of theoretical and empirical approaches to answer my research questions. First, I will review and analyze current literature on anthropogenic fear to determine the extent and magnitude of anthropogenic fear effects across ecosystems and trophic levels. I will contrast the impact of risk from humans and other predators on prey foraging behavior. For the second chapter, I will use a theoretical approach to understand the effect of fear at multiple trophic levels instead of a single trophic level. I hope to generate predictions on the spatial distribution of predators and prey in systems with pervasive fear. The third and fourth chapters will involve field data collection and experiments in South Andaman and Richie’s Archipelago. These sites have varying levels of protection with a strong gradient of coral cover and human activity. In the third chapter, I will quantify the effect of the loss of predators on coral reefs due to fishing on herbivore foraging behavior. My final chapter will be an experiment to quantify the extent of fear generated by fisheries on predator and prey species in coral reefs.

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