Elsevier

Animal Behaviour

Volume 86, Issue 4, October 2013, Pages 685-696
Animal Behaviour

Metabolic rate and body size are linked with perception of temporal information

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2013.06.018Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Animals vary in their ability to perceive changes in their environment visually.

  • Temporal perception can be quantified using critical flicker fusion (CFF).

  • High CFF indicates an ability to perceive rapid changes in the visual field.

  • We show that high metabolism and small body size are associated with high CFF.

  • We argue that these findings have both ecological and evolutionary implications.

Body size and metabolic rate both fundamentally constrain how species interact with their environment, and hence ultimately affect their niche. While many mechanisms leading to these constraints have been explored, their effects on the resolution at which temporal information is perceived have been largely overlooked. The visual system acts as a gateway to the dynamic environment and the relative resolution at which organisms are able to acquire and process visual information is likely to restrict their ability to interact with events around them. As both smaller size and higher metabolic rates should facilitate rapid behavioural responses, we hypothesized that these traits would favour perception of temporal change over finer timescales. Using critical flicker fusion frequency, the lowest frequency of flashing at which a flickering light source is perceived as constant, as a measure of the maximum rate of temporal information processing in the visual system, we carried out a phylogenetic comparative analysis of a wide range of vertebrates that supported this hypothesis. Our results have implications for the evolution of signalling systems and predator–prey interactions, and, combined with the strong influence that both body mass and metabolism have on a species' ecological niche, suggest that time perception may constitute an important and overlooked dimension of niche differentiation.

Keywords

comparative analysis
critical flicker fusion
evolutionary ecology
predator–prey
temporal resolution

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