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Exploration is dependent on reproductive state, not social state, in a cooperatively breeding bird

Authors :
Edwards, HA
Dugdale, HL
Richardson, DS
Komdeur, J
Burke, T
Dugdale group
Komdeur lab
Source :
Behavioral Ecology, 27(6), 1889-1896. Oxford University Press, Behavioral Ecology
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Lay Summary An individual’s circumstances or properties—also known as state—maybe a mechanism encouraging behavioral differences among individuals. We investigated whether exploration was associated with social state or reproductive state (i.e., insect abundance at year of birth) in a wild cooperative breeder. We found fast novel object exploration was associated with young individuals born into years of high insect abundance (i.e., low future reproductive state), suggesting this behavior is reproductive state-dependent.<br />Personality is an intriguing phenomenon in populations because it constrains behavioral flexibility. One theory suggests that personality could be generated and maintained if dependent on asset protection. It is predicted that trade-offs with fitness expectations and survival probability encourage consistent behavioral differences among individuals (personality). Although not mutually exclusive, the social niche specialization hypothesis suggests that a group of individuals that repeatedly interact will develop personality to avoid costly social conflict. The point at which behavioral consistency originates in the social niche hypothesis is still unclear, with predictions for development after a change in social status. In the facultative cooperatively breeding Seychelles warbler (Acrocephalus sechellensis), residing on Cousin Island, breeding vacancies are limited and this forces individuals into different social roles. We used this system to test whether reproductive and social state predicted among-individual differences in exploration. We had 2 predictions. First, that an individual’s start in life can predict personality, whereby young individuals with a good start to life (associated with early age reproduction and earlier onset survival senescence) are fast explorers, suggesting reproductive state-dependence. Second, that an individual’s social status can predict personality, whereby dominant individuals will be fast explorers, suggesting that the behavior is social state-dependent. Neither of the behaviors was associated with social state and social state did not affect behavioral consistency. However, novel object exploration was associated with a proxy of reproductive state. Our results provide further support for state being a mechanism for generating individual differences in behavior.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10452249
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Behavioral Ecology, 27(6), 1889-1896. Oxford University Press, Behavioral Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....aac529abee6f208635a54387e55f3654