Diel and Life-History Characteristics of Personality: Consistency Versus Flexibility in Relation to Ecological Change

J. Colton Watts, Chelsea R. Ross, Thomas C. Jones

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Abstract

Despite the potential benefits of modifying behaviour according to changing ecological conditions, many populations comprise individuals that differ consistently in behaviour across situations, contexts and points in time (i.e. individuals show personality). If personalities are adaptive, the balance between consistency and flexibility of behavioural traits should reflect the ability of individuals to detect and respond to changing conditions in an appropriate and timely manner and, thus, depend upon the pace and predictability of changing conditions. We investigated the balance between individual consistency and flexibility in the subsocial spider Anelosimus studiosus by assaying boldness across the diel cycle and correlating these data with patterns of prey and threat abundance in the natural habitat. We found significant diel flexibility in boldness correlating with drastic and predictable changes in prey availability. Moreover, the strength of within-individual flexibility in boldness was comparable to the strength of rank-order consistency among individuals. We also found evidence that mean boldness level and among-individual variation in boldness are correlated with reproductive status. These data emphasize the interplay between behavioural consistency and flexibility and suggest that temporal characteristics of ecological conditions may be vital in assessing the strength, stability and adaptive value of animal personalities.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalAnimal Behaviour
Volume101
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 1 2015

Keywords

  • Anelosimus studiosus
  • aggression
  • behavioural flexibility
  • behavioural types
  • comb-footed spider
  • diel rhythm
  • life history
  • personality

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