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. 2022 Feb 16;16:784835. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2022.784835

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Sex differences in aggressive behavior. (A) Schematic illustration of experimental protocol for zebrafish fighting. After overnight physical and visual isolation, sex-matched dyads perform agonistic behaviors until one of the fish surrenders. After winner and loser determination, both opponents were isolated again until tissue collection. (B) Sex differences in behavioral parameters. Latency and time of resolution are expressed in minutes. The frequency of each agonistic behavior is calculated as the number of each behavioral display, divided by the duration of the encounter until conflict resolution. Aggressive behaviors include antiparallel displays, circles, bites, chases and strikes, while submissive behaviors include freeze, flee, and retreats (Oliveira et al., 2011). Box plots were used to plot the data: the box extends to the furthest data points within the 25th and 75th percentile, and whiskers extend to the furthest data points not considered outliers. Asterisks indicate significant differences (p < 0.05) using t-test (frequency of aggressive and submissive behaviors, antiparallel displays, chases, flee, strikes, retreats) or Mann-Whitney (latency, time of resolution, frequency of bites, circles, freeze). (C) Temporal dynamics of male-male (left) and female-female (right) encounters. All behaviors were analyzed and quantified during each dyadic encounter, and graphs indicate the presence of each behavior throughout all encounters. Error bars represent the earliest and latest moment in which each behavior is observed. The line inside the boxes represenst the median. (D) PCA-based on all behavioral traits (bites, circles, chase, antiparallel displays, flee, strike, retreat, and freeze) in males and females. Purple triangles indicate male individual scores and green dots indicate female individual scores for PC1 and PC2, whereas the larger purple triangle indicates the centroid of the male distribution and the larger green dot the centroid of the female data points Differences between the sexes were assessed using Euclidean dissimilarities and each test was conducted using 999 permutations of appropriate units (perMANOVA p-value = 0.012, F = 5.5502). (E) Box plots comparing male and female PC1 scores (Mann-Whitney U test: W = 463.5, p = 0.0190).