Social context modulates idiosyncrasy of behaviour in the gregarious cockroach Blaberus discoidalis

Individuals are different, but they can work together to perform adaptive collective behaviours. Despite emerging evidence that individual variation strongly affects group performance, it is less clear to what extent individual variation is modulated by participation in collective behaviour. We exam...

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Published inAnimal behaviour Vol. 111; pp. 297 - 305
Main Authors Crall, James D., Souffrant, André D., Akandwanaho, Dominic, Hescock, Sawyer D., Callan, Sarah E., Coronado, W. Melissa, Baldwin, Maude W., de Bivort, Benjamin L.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Elsevier Ltd 01.01.2016
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Ltd
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Summary:Individuals are different, but they can work together to perform adaptive collective behaviours. Despite emerging evidence that individual variation strongly affects group performance, it is less clear to what extent individual variation is modulated by participation in collective behaviour. We examined light avoidance (negative phototaxis) in the gregarious cockroach Blaberus discoidalis, in both solitary and group contexts. Cockroaches in groups exhibited idiosyncratic light-avoidance performance that persisted across days, with some individual cockroaches avoiding a light stimulus 75% of the time, and others avoiding the light just above chance (i.e. ∼50% of the time). These individual differences were robust to group composition. Surprisingly, these differences did not persist when individuals were tested in isolation, but returned when testing was once again done in groups. During the solo testing phase cockroaches exhibited individually consistent light-avoidance tendencies, but these differences were uncorrelated with performance in any group context. Therefore, we have observed not only that individual variation affects group-level performance, but also that whether or not a task is performed collectively can have a significant, predictable effect on how an individual behaves. That individual behavioural variation is modulated by whether a task is performed collectively has major implications for understanding variation in behaviours that are facultatively social, and it is essential that ethologists consider social context when evaluating individual behavioural differences. •We used computer vision to automatically track individual cockroaches over several weeks.•Groups of cockroaches were better than individuals at avoiding light stimuli.•Individual cockroaches showed different performance levels in light avoidance.•Individual differences were not maintained when cockroaches were tested in isolation.•Individual differences persisted when group composition changed.
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ISSN:0003-3472
1095-8282
DOI:10.1016/j.anbehav.2015.10.032