1. The effects of personality on survival and trappability in a wild mouse during a population cycle
- Author
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Bram, Vanden Broecke, Vincent, Sluydts, Joachim, Mariën, Christopher Andrew, Sabuni, Apia W, Massawe, Erik, Matthysen, and Herwig, Leirs
- Subjects
Mice ,Reproduction ,Population Dynamics ,Animals ,Murinae ,Personality - Abstract
The pace-of-life syndrome (POLS) theory provides an evolutionary explanation for the existence of consistent among-individual variation in behaviour, or animal personality. Herein, individuals with a fast lifestyle are considered to be bolder and should take more risks resulting in a lower life expectancy compared to shyer individuals with a slower lifestyle. However, this assumption depends on the levels of intra-specific competition that the individuals experience which has rarely been tested in species that experience large changes in competition on a very short time scale. We used the multimammate mice (Mastomys natalensis) as a model system to study the POLS assumption by investigating the effects of two personality traits (exploration and stress-sensitivity) on survival, maturation (a proxy for reproductive investment) and recapture probability during one population cycle (N
- Published
- 2021