| Literature DB >> 30214056 |
Mark A Whiteside1, Mackenzie M Bess2, Elisa Frasnelli3, Christine E Beardsworth2, Ellis J G Langley2, Jayden O van Horik2, Joah R Madden2.
Abstract
Brain lateralization is considered adaptive because it leads to behavioral biases and specializations that bring fitness benefits. Across species, strongly lateralized individuals perform better in specific behaviors likely to improve survival. What constrains continued exaggerated lateralization? We measured survival of pheasants, finding that individuals with stronger bias in their footedness had shorter life expectancies compared to individuals with weak biases. Consequently, weak, or no footedness provided the highest fitness benefits. If, as suggested, footedness is indicative of more general brain lateralization, this could explain why continued brain lateralization is constrained even though it may improve performance in specific behaviors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30214056 PMCID: PMC6137170 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-32066-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The strength and direction of footedness, measured as a laterality index based on the numbers of times an individual was observed using their left or right foot to step onto/over an obstacle (formula: (left − right)/(left + right)), for the observed population (grey bars) and an expected population that behaved randomly based on the number of times we watched a bird and that exhibited an even likelihood of using the right foot (white bars; error bars indicate ±1 SD). -1 represents an individual which has a right footed bias, an individual with +1 has a fully left footed bias and an individual with 0 has no bias. The solid red line indicates the mean strength of footedness (-0.101) for the tested population. This compares to a population subject to the same sampling regime but which was randomly footed (Samples >4 and released: mean = −0.00026, SD = 0.034, Randomization test: n = 5000, P = 0.004). The dashed line represents a normal distribution around −0.00026 of the expected population.
Figure 2A Kaplan-Meier plot representing that the probability of survival for pheasants that were released with a lower than the mean bias in their footedness (N = 64, red line) or higher than the mean bias in footedness (N = 39, blue line). Footedness was recorded after the chicks were 16 days old and calculated regardless of directions (formula: √ ((left − right)/(left + right))2. +represents censored points.