Abstract

The existence of among-individual variation in behaviour within populations is poorly understood. Recent theory suggests that fine-scale individual differences in investment into current versus future reproduction may lead to a ‘slow-fast’-pace-of-life continuum, also referred to as the ‘pace-of-life-syndrome’ (POLS) hypothesis. According to this idea, individuals are predicted to differ in their level of risk-taking, which may drive among-individual variation and covariation of behaviours. Consistent individual differences in aggression, an ecologically relevant and potentially risky behaviour, have been reported across the animal kingdom. Here we test whether such individual differences in aggression are a manifestation of underlying differences in risk-taking. In a wild blue tit (Cyanistes caeruleus) population, we used standard behavioural tests to investigate if male territorial aggressiveness and risk-taking during breeding are positively related. At the start of breeding, we simulated conspecific territorial intrusions to obtain repeated measures of male aggressiveness. Subsequently, we measured male risk-taking as their latency to resume brood provisioning after presenting two different predators at their nest: human and sparrowhawk, a common predator of adult songbirds. First, we found substantial repeatability for male aggressiveness (R = 0.56 ± 0.08 SE). Second, while males took longer to resume provisioning after presentation of a sparrowhawk mount as compared to a human observer, risk-taking was repeatable across these two predator contexts (R = 0.51 ± 0.13 SE). Finally, we found no evidence for a correlation between male aggressiveness and risk-taking, thereby providing little support to a main prediction of the POLS hypothesis.Significance statementConsistent, and often correlated, individual differences in basal behaviours, such as aggression, exploration and sociability, are found across the animal kingdom. Why individuals consistently differ in their behaviour is poorly understood, as behavioural traits would seem inherently flexible. The ‘pace-of-life syndrome’ (POLS) hypothesis proposes observed behavioural variation to reflect differences in risk-taking associated with individual reproductive strategies. We tested this idea in a wild blue tit population by investigating whether individual males that were more aggressive toward territorial intruders also took more risk when provisioning their nestlings under a threat of predation. While we found consistent individual differences in both aggressiveness and risk-taking, these behaviours were not significantly correlated. Therefore, our study demonstrates among-individual variation in ecologically relevant behaviours in wild blue tits but provides little support for the POLS hypothesis.

Highlights

  • Aggression is a basal behaviour expressed in the acquisition or defence of fitness-enhancing resources such as territory, food and mates, but which can have energetic and other costs such as injury or death

  • In this study, conducted on a wild population of blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus), we investigated if individual levels of male territorial aggressiveness, a biologically relevant behaviour, are positively related to risk-taking when provisioning young in the face of predation

  • We focused on variation in male aggressiveness, as the interpretation of female responses to simulated territorial intrusions may be ambiguous

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Summary

Introduction

Aggression is a basal behaviour expressed in the acquisition or defence of fitness-enhancing resources such as territory, food and mates, but which can have energetic and other costs such as injury or death. The hypothesized covariation of life history, behaviour and physiological traits (Ricklefs and Wikelski 2002) is gaining traction as a framework to explain phenotypic variation within populations (Réale et al 2010; Dammhahn et al 2018). According to this pace-of-life-syndrome hypothesis (hereafter POLS hypothesis), individuals broadly vary along a slow-fast continuum over suites of correlated behavioural, physiological and life history traits. Individuals on the ‘slow’ end may be characterized by lower aggressiveness, take fewer risks, reproduce later in life and invest more in survival (and future reproduction) (Wolf et al 2007; Réale et al 2010; Dammhahn et al 2018; Wright et al 2019)

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