Holtmann Benedikt, Lara Carlos E, Santos Eduardo S A, Gillum Joanne E, Gemmell Neil J, Nakagawa Shinichi
Behavioural Ecology, Department of Biology, Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich, Planegg-Martinsried, Germany.
Department of Zoology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
J Evol Biol. 2022 Apr;35(4):539-551. doi: 10.1111/jeb.13906. Epub 2021 Aug 6.
Although consistent between-individual differences in behaviour (i.e. animal personality) are ubiquitous in natural populations, relatively few studies have examined how personalities influence the formation of social relationships. Yet, behavioural characteristics of both sexes might be key when it comes to pair-bond formation, and cooperation with partners to successfully rear offspring. We here use a wild population of dunnocks (Prunella modularis) to first investigate whether individuals mate nonrandomly (i.e. assortative mating) with regard to four behavioural traits-flight-initiation distance (FID), provisioning, activity and vigilance-that differ in repeatability and have previously been associated with mating patterns and fitness in other species. Second, we test whether an individual's FID is associated with variability in the dunnocks' mating system (i.e. monogamous pairs vs. polygamous groups). Finally, we determine whether FID and provisioning of males and females associate with their reproductive success. We found no statistical support for assortative mating in FID between males and females. Interestingly, in polygamous groups, co-breeding males differed in their FIDs with dominant alpha males having significantly shorter FIDs compared with subordinate beta-males. Moreover, there was evidence for assortative mating in provisioning for alpha males and females in polygamous groups. We also found that male provisioning influenced reproductive success of both sexes, whereas female provisioning rates only positively correlated with her own but not their partner(s) reproductive output. Our results suggest that personality differences may have important implications for social relationships, the emergence of different mating patterns and ultimately reproductive success within populations.
尽管个体间行为的一致性差异(即动物个性)在自然种群中普遍存在,但相对较少的研究探讨了个性如何影响社会关系的形成。然而,在配偶关系形成以及与伴侣合作成功养育后代方面,两性的行为特征可能是关键因素。我们在此利用一个野生成年鹪鹩(Prunella modularis)种群,首先调查个体在四个行为特征——飞行起始距离(FID)、育雏行为、活动和警觉性——方面是否存在非随机交配(即选型交配),这四个行为特征在可重复性上存在差异,并且先前已与其他物种的交配模式和适应性相关联。其次,我们测试个体的FID是否与鹪鹩交配系统的变异性(即一夫一妻制配偶对与多配偶制群体)相关。最后,我们确定雄性和雌性的FID以及育雏行为是否与其繁殖成功率相关。我们没有发现雄性和雌性在FID方面存在选型交配的统计学证据。有趣的是,在多配偶制群体中,共同育雏的雄性在FID上存在差异,占主导地位的阿尔法雄性的FID明显短于从属的贝塔雄性。此外,有证据表明在多配偶制群体中,阿尔法雄性和雌性在育雏行为方面存在选型交配。我们还发现雄性育雏行为影响两性的繁殖成功率,而雌性的育雏率仅与其自身而非其伴侣的繁殖产出呈正相关。我们的结果表明,个性差异可能对社会关系、不同交配模式的出现以及最终种群内的繁殖成功具有重要影响。