| Literature DB >> 31618450 |
Niels J Dingemanse1, Maria Moiron2,3, Yimen G Araya-Ajoy2,4, Alexia Mouchet1,2, Robin N Abbey-Lee2,5.
Abstract
Adaptive integration of life history and behaviour is expected to result in variation in the pace-of-life. Previous work focused on whether 'risky' phenotypes live fast but die young, but reported conflicting support. We posit that individuals exhibiting risky phenotypes may alternatively invest heavily in early-life reproduction but consequently suffer greater reproductive senescence. We used a 7-year longitudinal dataset with >1,200 breeding records of >800 female great tits assayed annually for exploratory behaviour to test whether within-individual age dependency of reproduction varied with exploratory behaviour. We controlled for biasing effects of selective (dis)appearance and within-individual behavioural plasticity. Slower and faster explorers produced moderate-sized clutches when young; faster explorers subsequently showed an increase in clutch size that diminished with age (with moderate support for declines when old), whereas slower explorers produced moderate-sized clutches throughout their lives. There was some evidence that the same pattern characterized annual fledgling success, if so, unpredictable environmental effects diluted personality-related differences in this downstream reproductive trait. Support for age-related selective appearance was apparent, but only when failing to appreciate within-individual plasticity in reproduction and behaviour. Our study identifies within-individual age-dependent reproduction, and reproductive senescence, as key components of life-history strategies that vary between individuals differing in risky behaviour. Future research should thus incorporate age-dependent reproduction in pace-of-life studies.Entities:
Keywords: age dependence; behaviour; life history; personality; reaction norms; reproduction; senescence; variance partitioning
Year: 2019 PMID: 31618450 DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anim Ecol ISSN: 0021-8790 Impact factor: 5.091