Abstract

Individuals differ in personality and immediate behavioural plasticity. While developmental environment may explain this group diversity, the effect of parental environment is still unexplored-a surprising observation since parental environment influences mean behaviour. We tested whether developmental and parental environments impacted personality and immediate plasticity. We raised two generations of Physa acuta snails in the laboratory with or without developmental exposure to predator cues. Escape behaviour was repeatedly assessed on adult snails with or without predator cues in the immediate environment. On average, snails were slower to escape if they or their parents had been exposed to predator cues during development. Snails were also less plastic in response to immediate predation risk on average if they or their parents had been exposed to predator cues. Group diversity in personality was greater in predator-exposed snails than unexposed snails, while parental environment did not influence it. Group diversity in immediate plasticity was not significant. Our results suggest that only developmental environment plays a key role in the emergence of group diversity in personality, but that parental environment influences mean behavioural responses to the environmental change. Consequently, although different, both developmental and parental cues may have evolutionary implications on behavioural responses.

Highlights

  • Over the last two decades, tremendous interest in individual behaviour has revealed that individuals can consistently differ in their behaviour over time and in their immediate behavioural plasticity

  • Effects of parental and developmental environments on group mean in personality and immediate plasticity

  • Parental and developmental exposures to predator cues additively decreased group mean in immediate plasticity

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Summary

Introduction

Over the last two decades, tremendous interest in individual behaviour has revealed that individuals can consistently differ in their behaviour over time (i.e. personality diversity within a population or within a group of individuals, referred thereafter to group diversity in personality; Schindler et al 2010; Wolf & Weissing 2012) and in their immediate behavioural plasticity (i.e. in the individual responsiveness to changes in the immediate environment that surrounds the individual when the behaviour is expressed, referred thereafter to group diversity in immediate plasticity; Dingemanse et al 2012; Mitchell & Biro 2017). Developmental environment appears to shape group diversity in both personality and immediate plasticity

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