| Literature DB >> 27356870 |
Chang S Han1, Heidi Y Jäger1, Niels J Dingemanse1.
Abstract
Selection may favour individuals of the same population to differ consistently in nutritional preference, for example, because optimal diets covary with morphology or personality. We provided Southern field crickets (Gryllus bimaculatus) with two synthetic food sources (carbohydrates and proteins) and quantified repeatedly how much of each macronutrient was consumed by each individual. We then quantified (i) whether individuals were repeatable in carbohydrate and protein intake rate, (ii) whether an individual's average daily intake of carbohydrates was correlated with its average daily intake of protein, and (iii) whether short-term changes in intake of carbohydrates coincided with changes in intake of protein within individuals. Intake rates were individually repeatable for both macronutrients. However, individuals differed in their relative daily intake of carbohydrates versus proteins (i.e., 'nutritional preference'). By contrast, total consumption varied plastically as a function of body weight within individuals. Body weight-but not personality (i.e., aggression, exploration behaviour)-positively predicted nutritional preference at the individual level as large crickets repeatedly consumed a higher carbohydrate to protein ratio compared to small ones. Our finding of level-specific associations between the consumption of distinct nutritional components demonstrates the merit of applying multivariate and multi-level viewpoints to the study of nutritional preference.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27356870 PMCID: PMC4928176 DOI: 10.1038/srep29071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Within- and among-individual correlations between behavioural (exploration, aggression, mating activity) and morphological (body weight) traits, nutrient intake (carbohydrate (C) and protein (P) intake) and nutritional preference (arctangent-transformed C:P ratio).
| Exploration | Aggression | Mating activity | Weight | P intake | C intake | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (A) within-individual correlations | ||||||
| Aggression | −0.09 (0.06) | |||||
| Mating Activity | −0.04 (0.06) | 0.002 (0.06) | ||||
| Weight | −0.11 (0.06) | −0.07 (0.06) | 0.01 (0.06) | |||
| P intake | −0.01 (0.06) | −0.06 (0.06) | −0.05 (0.06) | |||
| C intake | 0.04 (0.06) | −0.07 (0.06) | 0.02 (0.06) | |||
| Nutritional preference | 0.06 (0.06) | −0.005 (0.06) | 0.06 (0.06) | −0.02 (0.06) | ||
| (B) among-individual correlations | ||||||
| Aggression | 0.05 (0.22) | |||||
| Mating Activity | −0.02 (0.21) | −0.34 (0.20) | ||||
| Weight | 0.25 (0.15) | −0.15 (0.15) | ||||
| P intake | −0.22 (0.20) | 0.04 (0.21) | 0.30 (0.20) | 0.22 (0.15) | ||
| C intake | −0.22 (0.20) | 0.33 (0.20) | 0.01 (0.20) | −0.04 (0.20) | ||
| Nutritional preference | −0.12 (0.21) | 0.03 (0.21) | −0.10 (0.20) | −0.10 (0.51) | ||
(A) Within- and (B) among-individual correlations are provided with standard errors in parentheses. Significant correlations (P < 0.05) are printed in bold-face.
Figure 1(a) The among-individual correlation (n = 82 individual means) and (b) the within-individual correlation (n = 383 observations) between carbohydrate and protein intake, and (c) the among-individual correlation (n = 82 individual means) and (d) the within-individual correlation (n = 383 observations) between body weight and nutritional preference in Southern field crickets. Following31, the plot of the among-individual correlation is visualized as the correlation between means of each individual’s z-transformed phenotypes; the within-individual correlation is visualized as the correlation between the z-transformed deviations of each observation from a focal individual’s mean for both phenotypes. Larger values of nutritional preference indicate that individuals prefer more carbohydrates over proteins.