| Literature DB >> 27784956 |
Guðbjörg Ásta Ólafsdóttir1, Kit Magellan2.
Abstract
ABSTRACT: Boldness, the tendency to be explorative, risk prone and proactive, often varies consistently between individuals. An individual's position on the boldness-shyness continuum has many implications. Bold individuals may outperform shyer conspecifics during foraging as they cover more ground, accumulate information more rapidly and make more frequent food discoveries. Individual variation in boldness may also affect behavioural plasticity across environmental contexts, as the time to process new information, the ability to locate and memorise resources and the time and ability to apply prior information in a novel context all differ between individuals. The primary aim of the current study was to examine plasticity in, and covariation between, boldness, foraging speed and foraging accuracy across social foraging contexts. We showed that the stickleback that were shyest when foraging alone became relatively boldest when foraging in a social context and also delayed their entry to a known food patch the most in the presence of conspecifics. These results support the assertion that shyer foragers are more reactive to social cues and add to current knowledge of how an individual's position on the boldness-shyness continuum may correlate to foraging task performance and behavioural plasticity. We conclude that the correlation between boldness and behavioural plasticity may have broad relevance as the ability to adjust or retain behaviours in changing social environments could often have consequences for fitness. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Animal personality may affect how much individuals change their behaviour to suit different environments. We studied the link between threespine stickleback personality (boldness or shyness), foraging performance and change in foraging performance when either alone or in the presence of other stickleback. We found that shyer threespine stickleback were more reactive to the presence of other fish when foraging. When observed or joined by other fish, shy stickleback started exploring earlier, but entered a known food patch later, than when alone. Bolder stickleback changed their foraging behaviour much less in the presence of other fish. Our results suggest that how bold or shy individuals are may have important consequences on how well they adjust their foraging behaviour to environmental change.Entities:
Keywords: Audience effect; Behavioural plasticity; Boldness; Cognitive style; Speed-accuracy trade off; Threespine stickleback
Year: 2016 PMID: 27784956 PMCID: PMC5054052 DOI: 10.1007/s00265-016-2193-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Ecol Sociobiol ISSN: 0340-5443 Impact factor: 2.980
Fig. 1Experimental set-up. a Solitary foraging task. b Social foraging task 2: joined by a conspecific. c Social foraging task 1: observed by conspecifics
Fig. 2Depiction of raw data showing boldness (latency to explore in seconds), foraging speed (latency to feed in seconds) and correct food patch choice across trials of the solitary foraging task and social foraging tasks (task 1: observed by conspecifics and task 2: joined by conspecifics). Boxplots depict median (horizontal black line), first (box) and third (whiskers) quartile. Values falling out with the third quartile are presented as black circles and grey circles represent mean values
Fig. 3Lines represent fitted individual slopes of boldness, foraging speed and correct entry across trials of the solitary foraging task
Results of the random regression (RR) models examining between- and within-individual variation in boldness (latency to explore), foraging speed (latency to feed) and foraging accuracy (correct food patch choice), between-individual variation in the slopes of those traits across trials as well as mean–slope covariation across trials
| Posterior mode | 95 % HPD interval | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Latency to explore | Random structure | |||
| ID intercept |
| 0.502 | 9.490 | |
| Intercept/slope covariation | −0.276 | −0.895 | 0.167 | |
| ID slope | 0.031 | 0.000 | 0.098 | |
| Within-individual variation |
| 2.529 | 4.670 | |
| Fixed effects | ||||
| Model intercept | 3.560 | 2.529 | 4.670 | |
| Trial number | − | −0.499 | −0.155 | |
| Latency to feed | Random structure | |||
| ID intercept | 2.616 | 0.000 | 6.845 | |
| Intercept/slope covariation | −0.386 | −1115 | 0.057 | |
| ID slope | 0.068 | 0.000 | 0.198 | |
| Within-individual variation |
| 2.687 | 5.037 | |
| Fixed effects | ||||
| Model intercept |
| 3.798 | 5.739 | |
| Trial number | −0.168 | −0.360 | 0.021 | |
| Correct food patch choice | Random structure | |||
| ID intercept |
| 0.322 | 3.139 | |
| Intercept/slope covariation | −0.262 | −1.008 | 0.323 | |
| ID slope |
| 0.252 | 1.305 | |
| Within-individual variation | – | – | – | |
| Fixed effects | ||||
| Model intercept | −0.444 | −1.826 | 0.834 | |
| Trial number |
| 0.431 | 1.594 | |
Boldface indicates estimates were the 95 % HPD interval does not overlap with 0
Fig. 4Lines represent fitted individual slopes of boldness and foraging speed across the solitary foraging task and social foraging task 2 (joined by conspecifics). Solitary foraging task 1 was not shown as the effect was similar but less pronounced than for task 2
Results of the random regression (RR) models, across social foraging tasks, examining between- and within-individual variation in boldness (latency to explore) and foraging speed (latency to feed), between-individual variation in the slopes of those traits across tasks as well as intercept–slope covariation across tasks
| Posterior mode | 95 % HPD interval | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Latency to explore | Random structure | ID intercept |
| 0.987 | 0.040 |
| Intercept/slope covariation, task 2 |
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| Intercept/slope correlation, task 2 |
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| ID slope, task 2 |
| 0.681 | 4.355 | ||
| Intercept/slope covariation, task 1 |
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| Intercept/slope correlation, Task 1 |
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| ID slope, task 1 |
| 0.583 | 4.401 | ||
| Within-individual variation |
| 1.637 | 2.611 | ||
| Fixed effects | Model intercept |
| 2.947 | 4.605 | |
| Task 2 |
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| Task 1 |
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| Solitary task: trial number |
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| Task 2: trial number | 0.062 |
| 0.595 | ||
| Task 1: trial number |
|
| 0.918 | ||
| Latency to feed | Random structure | ID intercept |
| 0.369 | 1.632 |
| Intercept/slope covariation, task 2 |
|
| 0.407 | ||
| ID slope, task 2 |
| 0.344 | 2.079 | ||
| Intercept/slope covariation, task 1 |
|
| 0.368 | ||
| ID slope, task 1 |
| 0.275 | 1.527 | ||
| Within-individual variation |
| 2.366 | 3.601 | ||
| Fixed effects | Model intercept |
| 4.107 | 5.596 | |
| Task 2 |
| 0.001 | 2.666 | ||
| Task 1 | 1.670 |
| 3.487 | ||
| Solitary task: trial number |
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| Task 2: trial number |
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| 0.110 | ||
| Task 1: trial number |
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| 0.705 | ||
Only significant intercept–slope correlations are shown. Boldface indicates estimates were the 95 % HPD interval did not overlap with 0
Covariation and correlation of boldness (latency to explore), foraging speed (latency to feed) and foraging accuracy (correct food patch choice) across social tasks and across trials within the solitary foraging task
| Across social tasks | Within solitary foraging | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Posterior mode | 95 % HPD interval | Posterior mode | 95 % HPD interval | ||||
| Latency to explore/latency to feed | |||||||
| Between individuals | Covariation | −2.32 | −5.49 | −1.03 | |||
| Correlation | −0.85 | −0.96 | −0.56 | ||||
| Within individuals | Covariation | −0.70 | −1.46 | −0.22 | |||
| Correlation | −0.20 | −0.33 | −0.06 | ||||
| Latency to feed/correct food patch choice | |||||||
| Between individuals | Covariation | −1.18 | −3.30 | −0.26 | −1.63 | −4.02 | −0.25 |
| Correlation | −0.79 | −0.95 | −0.23 | −0.81 | −0.96 | −0.27 | |
| Within individuals | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
Only effects where the 95 % HPD interval did not overlap 0 are shown. Full model results can be found in the electronic supplementary material