Wolf Max, van Doorn G Sander, Leimar Olof, Weissing Franz J
Theoretical Biology Group, Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Studies, University of Groningen, Kerklaan 30, 9751 NN Haren, The Netherlands.
Nature. 2007 May 31;447(7144):581-4. doi: 10.1038/nature05835.
In recent years evidence has been accumulating that personalities are not only found in humans but also in a wide range of other animal species. Individuals differ consistently in their behavioural tendencies and the behaviour in one context is correlated with the behaviour in multiple other contexts. From an adaptive perspective, the evolution of animal personalities is still a mystery, because a more flexible structure of behaviour should provide a selective advantage. Accordingly, many researchers view personalities as resulting from constraints imposed by the architecture of behaviour (but see ref. 12). In contrast, we show here that animal personalities can be given an adaptive explanation. Our argument is based on the insight that the trade-off between current and future reproduction often results in polymorphic populations in which some individuals put more emphasis on future fitness returns than others. Life-history theory predicts that such differences in fitness expectations should result in systematic differences in risk-taking behaviour. Individuals with high future expectations (who have much to lose) should be more risk-averse than individuals with low expectations. This applies to all kinds of risky situations, so individuals should consistently differ in their behaviour. By means of an evolutionary model we demonstrate that this basic principle results in the evolution of animal personalities. It simultaneously explains the coexistence of behavioural types, the consistency of behaviour through time and the structure of behavioural correlations across contexts. Moreover, it explains the common finding that explorative behaviour and risk-related traits like boldness and aggressiveness are common characteristics of animal personalities.
近年来,越来越多的证据表明,个性不仅存在于人类中,也存在于广泛的其他动物物种中。个体在行为倾向方面始终存在差异,并且在一种情境下的行为与在多种其他情境下的行为相关。从适应性的角度来看,动物个性的进化仍然是一个谜,因为行为的更灵活结构应该会提供一种选择优势。因此,许多研究人员认为个性是由行为结构所施加的限制导致的(但见参考文献12)。相比之下,我们在此表明动物个性可以有一个适应性的解释。我们的论点基于这样一种见解,即当前繁殖与未来繁殖之间的权衡往往会导致多态性种群,其中一些个体比其他个体更强调未来的适应性回报。生活史理论预测,这种适应性期望的差异应该会导致冒险行为的系统性差异。对未来期望高的个体(有更多可失去的东西)应该比期望低的个体更规避风险。这适用于所有类型的风险情境,所以个体在行为上应该始终存在差异。通过一个进化模型,我们证明这一基本原则会导致动物个性的进化。它同时解释了行为类型的共存、行为随时间的一致性以及不同情境下行为相关性的结构。此外,它解释了一个常见的发现,即探索行为以及与风险相关的特质,如大胆和攻击性,是动物个性的共同特征。