The association between personalities, alternative breeding strategies and reproductive success in dunnocks
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...
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Published in | Journal of evolutionary biology Vol. 35; no. 4; pp. 539 - 551 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
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Switzerland
Oxford University Press
01.04.2022
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Abstract | 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.
Making use of the dunnock’s variable mating system, we investigate whether inter‐individual behavioural variation is associated with partner choice, social breeding system, as well as reproductive success. Our findings do not only support the idea that personality influences social relationships but also may have implications for the emergence of different mating systems. |
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AbstractList | 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.
Making use of the dunnock’s variable mating system, we investigate whether inter‐individual behavioural variation is associated with partner choice, social breeding system, as well as reproductive success. Our findings do not only support the idea that personality influences social relationships but also may have implications for the emergence of different mating systems. 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. 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. 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.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. |
Author | Holtmann, Benedikt Santos, Eduardo S. A. Gemmell, Neil J. Lara, Carlos E. Nakagawa, Shinichi Gillum, Joanne E. |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Benedikt orcidid: 0000-0002-2995-7274 surname: Holtmann fullname: Holtmann, Benedikt email: holtmann@biologie.uni-muenchen.de organization: University of Otago – sequence: 2 givenname: Carlos E. orcidid: 0000-0001-5425-0935 surname: Lara fullname: Lara, Carlos E. organization: University of Otago – sequence: 3 givenname: Eduardo S. A. orcidid: 0000-0002-0434-3655 surname: Santos fullname: Santos, Eduardo S. A. organization: University of São Paulo – sequence: 4 givenname: Joanne E. orcidid: 0000-0002-1069-0231 surname: Gillum fullname: Gillum, Joanne E. organization: University of Otago – sequence: 5 givenname: Neil J. orcidid: 0000-0003-0671-3637 surname: Gemmell fullname: Gemmell, Neil J. organization: University of Otago – sequence: 6 givenname: Shinichi orcidid: 0000-0002-7765-5182 surname: Nakagawa fullname: Nakagawa, Shinichi organization: University of New South Wales |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34314544$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
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CitedBy_id | crossref_primary_10_1016_j_neubiorev_2022_104980 crossref_primary_10_1098_rsos_230303 crossref_primary_10_1111_eth_13346 crossref_primary_10_1111_eth_13543 crossref_primary_10_1111_jeb_13998 crossref_primary_10_1016_j_anbehav_2024_08_004 |
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Snippet | Although consistent between‐individual differences in behaviour (i.e. animal personality) are ubiquitous in natural populations, relatively few studies have... Although consistent between-individual differences in behaviour (i.e. animal personality) are ubiquitous in natural populations, relatively few studies have... |
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SubjectTerms | Animal reproduction Animals Assortative mating behavioural types Breeding Breeding success evolutionary biology Female Females Flight behavior individual variation Male Males mate choice Mating Mating Preference, Animal monogamy Natural populations Offspring Personality Polygamy Population studies Populations progeny Provisioning Prunella Reproduction Reproductive fitness reproductive performance reproductive success social environment Songbirds Success Vigilance |
Title | The association between personalities, alternative breeding strategies and reproductive success in dunnocks |
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