Lovers, not fighters: docility influences reproductive fitness, but not survival, in male Cape ground squirrels, Xerus inauris

IF 1.9 2区 生物学 Q3 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology Pub Date : 2024-01-04 DOI:10.1007/s00265-023-03421-8
Miyako H. Warrington, Sienna Beaulieu, Riley Jellicoe, Sjoerd Vos, Nigel C. Bennett, Jane M. Waterman
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Abstract

Over their lifetime, individuals may use different behavioural strategies to maximize their fitness. Some behavioural traits may be consistent among individuals over time (i.e., ‘personality’ traits) resulting in an individual behavioural phenotype with different associated costs and benefits. Understanding how behavioural traits are linked to lifetime fitness requires tracking individuals over their lifetime. Here, we leverage a long-term study on a multi-year living species (maximum lifespan ~ 10 years) to examine how docility (an individual’s reaction to trapping and handling) may contribute to how males are able to maximize their lifetime fitness. Cape ground squirrels are burrowing mammals that live in social groups, and although males lack physical aggression and territoriality, they vary in docility. Males face high predation risk and high reproductive competition and employ either of two reproductive tactics (‘natal’ or ‘band’) which are not associated with different docility personalities. We found that although more docile individuals sired more offspring on an annual basis, docility did not affect an individual’s long-term (lifetime) reproductive output. Survival was not associated with docility or body condition, but annual survival was influenced by rainfall. Our findings suggest that although docility may represent a behavioural strategy to maximize fitness by possibly playing a role in female-male associations or female mate-choice, variations in docility within our study population is likely maintained by other environmental drivers. However, individual variations in behaviours may still contribute as part of the ‘tool kit’ individuals use to maximize their lifetime fitness.

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恋人,而非战士:温顺会影响雄性开普地松鼠的繁殖能力,但不会影响其存活率
在一生中,个体可能会使用不同的行为策略来最大限度地提高自身的适应能力。有些行为特征(即 "个性 "特征)可能在个体间长期保持一致,从而形成具有不同相关成本和收益的个体行为表型。要了解行为特征如何与终生体能相关联,就需要对个体进行终生跟踪。在这里,我们利用对一种多年生物种(最长寿命约为 10 年)的长期研究,来探讨温顺性(个体对诱捕和处理的反应)如何有助于雄性个体最大限度地提高其终生体能。开普地松鼠是一种生活在社会群体中的穴居哺乳动物,虽然雄性缺乏身体攻击性和领地意识,但它们的温顺程度却各不相同。雄性面临着高捕食风险和高繁殖竞争,并采用两种繁殖策略("产仔 "或 "带仔")中的任何一种,而这两种策略与不同的温顺个性无关。我们发现,虽然温顺的个体每年能繁殖更多的后代,但温顺并不影响个体的长期(终生)繁殖产量。存活率与温顺度或身体状况无关,但年存活率受降雨量影响。我们的研究结果表明,虽然温顺可能是雌雄结合或雌性择偶过程中的一种行为策略,以最大限度地提高个体的适应能力,但在我们的研究种群中,温顺的变化很可能是由其他环境因素维持的。然而,行为的个体差异仍可能是个体用来最大化其一生适应能力的 "工具包 "的一部分。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
8.70%
发文量
146
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The journal publishes reviews, original contributions and commentaries dealing with quantitative empirical and theoretical studies in the analysis of animal behavior at the level of the individual, group, population, community, and species.
期刊最新文献
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