Lichtenstein James L L, Wright Colin M, Luscuskie Lauren P, Montgomery Graham A, Pinter-Wollman Noa, Pruitt Jonathan N
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Curr Zool. 2017 Oct 1;63(5):561-567. doi: 10.1093/cz/zow097. Epub 2016 Sep 27.
In animal societies, behavioral idiosyncrasies of the individuals often guide which tasks they should perform. Such personality-specific task participation can increase individual task efficiency, thereby improving group performance. While several recent studies have documented group-level benefits of within-group behavioral (i.e., personality) diversity, how these benefits are realized at the individual level is unclear. Here we probe the individual-level benefits of personality-driven task participation in the social spider . In , the presence of at least one highly bold individual catalyzes foraging behavior in shy colony members, and all group constituents heavily compete for prey. We assessed boldness by examining how quickly spiders resumed normal movement after a simulated predator attack. We test here whether (1) participants in collective foraging gain more mass from prey items and (2) whether bold individuals are less resistant to starvation than shy spiders, which would motivate the bold individuals to forage more. Next, we assembled colonies of shy spiders with and without a bold individual, added one prey item, and then tracked the mass gain of each individual spider after this single feeding event. We found that spiders that participated in prey capture (whether bold or shy) gained more mass than nonparticipators, and colonies containing a single bold spider gained more total mass than purely shy colonies. We also found that bold spiders participated in more collective foraging events and were more susceptible to starvation than shy spiders, suggesting that the aggressive foraging of bold individuals may represent a strategy to offset starvation risk. These findings add to the body of evidence that animal personality can shape social organization, individual performance, and group success.
在动物群体中,个体的行为特性常常决定它们应执行的任务。这种特定于个性的任务参与能够提高个体的任务效率,进而提升群体表现。尽管最近的几项研究记录了群体内部行为(即个性)多样性在群体层面的益处,但这些益处在个体层面是如何实现的尚不清楚。在此,我们探究个性驱动的任务参与在群居蜘蛛中的个体层面益处。在[研究情境]中,至少有一只高度大胆的个体的存在会促使害羞的群体成员进行觅食行为,并且所有群体成员会激烈争夺猎物。我们通过检查蜘蛛在模拟捕食者攻击后恢复正常活动的速度来评估大胆程度。我们在此测试:(1)参与集体觅食的个体是否从猎物中获取更多质量;(2)大胆的个体是否比害羞的蜘蛛更不耐饥饿,这会促使大胆的个体更多地觅食。接下来,我们组建了有和没有大胆个体的害羞蜘蛛群体,添加一个猎物,然后追踪在这单次喂食事件后每只蜘蛛的质量增加情况。我们发现,参与捕食猎物的蜘蛛(无论大胆还是害羞)比未参与者获取了更多质量,并且包含一只大胆蜘蛛的群体比纯害羞群体获取了更多的总质量。我们还发现,大胆的蜘蛛参与更多的集体觅食活动,并且比害羞的蜘蛛更易饥饿,这表明大胆个体的积极觅食可能是一种抵消饥饿风险的策略。这些发现进一步证明了动物个性能够塑造社会组织、个体表现和群体成功。