Počet záznamů: 1  

Stability of a behavioural syndrome vs. plasticity in individual behaviours over the breeding cycle: Ultimate and proximate explanations

  1. 1.
    0491943 - ÚBO 2019 RIV NL eng J - Článek v odborném periodiku
    Trnka, A. - Samaš, Peter - Grim, T.
    Stability of a behavioural syndrome vs. plasticity in individual behaviours over the breeding cycle: Ultimate and proximate explanations.
    Behavioural Processes. Roč. 153, August (2018), s. 100-106. ISSN 0376-6357. E-ISSN 1872-8308
    Grant CEP: GA ČR(CZ) GA17-12262S
    Institucionální podpora: RVO:68081766
    Klíčová slova: Behavioural correlations * Nest defence * Breath rate * Handling aggression * Stress hormone * Acrocephalus arundinaceus
    Obor OECD: Zoology
    Impakt faktor: 2.008, rok: 2018

    Animals often show correlated suites of consistent behavioural traits, i.e., personality or behavioural syndromes. Does this conflict with potential phenotypic plasticity which should be adaptive for animals facing various contexts and situations? This fundamental question has been tested predominantly in studies which were done in non-breeding contexts and under laboratory conditions. Therefore, in the present study we examined the temporal stability of behavioural correlations in a breeding context and under natural conditions. We found that in the great reed warbler (Acrocephalus arundinaceus) females, the intensity of their nest defence formed a behavioural syndrome with two other traits: their aggression during handling (self-defence) and stress responses during handling (breath rate). This syndrome was stable across the nesting cycle: each of the three behavioural traits was highly statistically repeatable between egg and nestling stages and the traits were strongly correlated with each other during both the egg stage and the nestling stage. Despite this consistency (i.e., rank order between stages) the individual behaviours changed their absolute values significantly during the same period. This shows that stable behavioural syndromes might be based on behaviours that are themselves unstable. Thus, syndromes do not inevitably constrain phenotypic plasticity. We suggest that the observed behavioural syndrome is the product of interactions between behavioural and life history trade-offs and that crucial proximate mechanisms for the plasticity and correlations between individual behaviours are hormonally-regulated.
    Trvalý link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0285540

     
     
Počet záznamů: 1  

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