| Literature DB >> 10413557 |
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Abstract
We examined whether individual differences in patterns of parental care relate to individual differences in situations involving novelty, risk and aggression in the convict cichlid, Cichlasoma (Archocentrus) nigrofasciatum. Individual differences in situations of novelty and risk could be summarized along two axes: Freezing versus Activity and Activity-Inspection versus Freezing. However, these factors were not independent and formed a single higher-order dimension of general activity. Parental locomotor activity was negatively correlated with the Freezing versus Activity factor in females. Males that did little brood provisioning tended to be less active in the presence of a novel fish. Individuals that spent more time near their offspring at late brood stages were less inhibited in behavioural tests. Furthermore, extreme assortative mating by body size was found (r(S)=0.91). The cichlids also spawned assortatively by the factor Freezing versus Activity and by the general activity factor (r(S)>/=0.49), but not by the factor Activity- Inspection versus Freezing or by aggressiveness. Copyright 1999 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.Entities:
Year: 1999 PMID: 10413557 DOI: 10.1006/anbe.1999.1124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Behav ISSN: 0003-3472 Impact factor: 2.844