Jánošíková Radoslava, Tulis Filip, Baláž Ivan, Eccard Jana A, Mazza Valeria
Department of Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Natural Sciences and Informatics, Constantine the Philosopher University in Nitra, Tr. A. Hlinku 1, 949 74, Nitra, Slovak Republic.
Animal Ecology, Institute for Biochemistry and Biology, University of Potsdam, Maulbeerallee 1, 14469, Potsdam, Germany.
Behav Ecol. 2025 May 28;36(4):araf053. doi: 10.1093/beheco/araf053. eCollection 2025 Jul-Aug.
At the edge of an ongoing expansion, pioneer individuals encounter novel ecological and evolutionary pressures that may not be experienced by conspecifics settled in long-colonized areas. Consistent behavioral differences among conspecifics (animal personality) may be important determinants of individuals' successful colonization of novel environments and range expansion. By enhancing an individual's ability to find food and shelter as well as increasing its capacity to navigate novel environments, behavioral traits such as exploration and risk-taking are thus expected to be more highly expressed in populations undergoing expansion than in established populations. We investigated among-individual variation in behaviors associated to risk-taking and exploratory tendencies in populations of small mammals during different stages of the colonization process. Using a standardized behavioral test in the field, we quantified exploration and boldness of striped field mice (, N = 95) from six subpopulations from Germany, where they are established, and in Slovakia, where a recolonization of the area is currently in progress, and in control species bank voles (, N = 76) that shared the same habitats but were long-established at all sites. Striped field mice in the expanding populations were significantly slower in exploring the open field arena, while showing comparable levels of risk taking compared to conspecifics from established populations. No difference in behavior was detected between the populations of bank voles. Our results suggest that a slow exploration strategy might play an advantageous role in expansion processes of small mammal populations.
在正在进行扩张的边缘,先锋个体面临着新的生态和进化压力,而定居于长期殖民化地区的同种个体可能不会经历这些压力。同种个体之间持续存在的行为差异(动物个性)可能是个体成功殖民新环境和范围扩张的重要决定因素。通过提高个体寻找食物和庇护所的能力以及增强其在新环境中导航的能力,探索和冒险等行为特征在正在扩张的种群中预计会比在已建立的种群中表现得更为突出。我们研究了小型哺乳动物种群在殖民化过程不同阶段与冒险和探索倾向相关的个体行为差异。通过在野外使用标准化行为测试,我们量化了来自德国六个已建立亚种群的条纹田鼠(N = 95)以及斯洛伐克正在进行该地区重新殖民化的条纹田鼠的探索和大胆程度,同时还对共享相同栖息地但在所有地点都已长期存在的对照物种棕背鼠平(N = 76)进行了量化。正在扩张的种群中的条纹田鼠在探索开阔场地时明显较慢,而与来自已建立种群的同种个体相比,它们表现出相当的冒险水平。在棕背鼠平种群之间未检测到行为差异。我们的结果表明,缓慢的探索策略可能在小型哺乳动物种群的扩张过程中发挥有利作用。