Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Conservation Biology, University of Maine, Orono, Maine, USA.
Department of Integrative Biology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2024 Feb;93(2):196-207. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.14037. Epub 2023 Dec 15.
Despite numerous studies examining the fitness consequences of animal personalities, predictions concerning the relationship between personality and survival are not consistent with empirical observations. Theory predicts that individuals who are risky (i.e. bold, active and aggressive) should have higher rates of mortality; however, empirical evidence shows high levels of variation in behaviour-survival relationships in wild populations. We suggest that this mismatch between predictions under theory and empirical observations results from environmental contingencies that drive heterogeneity in selection. This uncertainty may constrain any universal directional relationships between personality traits and survival. Specifically, we hypothesize that spatiotemporal fluctuations in perceived risk that arise from variability in refuge abundance and competitor density alter the relationship between personality traits and survival. In a large-scale manipulative experiment, we trapped four small mammal species in five subsequent years across six forest stands treated with different management practices in Maine, United States. Stands all occur within the same experimental forest but contain varying amounts of refuge and small mammal densities fluctuate over time and space. We quantified the effects of habitat structure and competitor density on the relationship between personality traits and survival to assess whether directional relationships differed depending on environmental contingencies. In the two most abundant species, deer mice and southern red-backed voles, risky behaviours (i.e. higher aggression and boldness) predicted apparent monthly survival probability. Mice that were more aggressive (less docile) had higher survival. Voles that were bolder (less timid) had higher survival, but in the risky forest stands only. Additionally, traits associated with stress coping and de-arousal increased survival probability in both species at high small mammal density but decreased survival at low density. In the two less abundant study species, there was no evidence for an effect of personality traits on survival. Our field experiment provides partial support for our hypothesis: that spatiotemporal fluctuations in refuge abundance and competitor density alter the relationship between personality traits and survival. Our findings also suggest that behaviours associated with stress coping and de-arousal may be subject to density-dependent selection and should be further assessed and incorporated into theory.
尽管有许多研究探讨了动物个性对适应性的影响,但关于个性与生存之间关系的预测与经验观察并不一致。理论预测,冒险的个体(即大胆、活跃和攻击性强的个体)应该有更高的死亡率;然而,经验证据表明,在野外种群中,行为-生存关系存在高度的变化。我们认为,理论预测与经验观察之间的这种不匹配是由环境偶然性引起的,这些偶然性导致了选择的异质性。这种不确定性可能会限制个性特征和生存之间任何普遍的定向关系。具体来说,我们假设,由于避难所数量和竞争密度的变化而导致的感知风险的时空波动,改变了个性特征和生存之间的关系。在一个大规模的操纵实验中,我们在美国缅因州的六个森林样地中,在五年内连续捕获了四种小型哺乳动物。样地都位于同一个实验林中,但避难所的数量不同,小型哺乳动物的密度随时间和空间而波动。我们量化了栖息地结构和竞争密度对个性特征与生存之间关系的影响,以评估定向关系是否因环境偶然性而不同。在两种最丰富的物种,鹿鼠和南方红背田鼠中,冒险行为(即更高的攻击性和大胆性)预测了明显的月生存概率。攻击性更强(不温顺)的老鼠有更高的存活率。更大胆(不胆怯)的田鼠有更高的存活率,但仅在冒险的森林样地中。此外,在两种小型哺乳动物密度较高的物种中,与应激应对和去唤醒相关的特征增加了生存概率,但在密度较低时则降低了生存概率。在两种较为稀少的研究物种中,没有证据表明个性特征对生存有影响。我们的野外实验部分支持了我们的假设:即避难所数量和竞争密度的时空波动改变了个性特征与生存之间的关系。我们的研究结果还表明,与应激应对和去唤醒相关的行为可能受到密度依赖的选择,应该进一步评估并纳入理论。