Abstract

While the number of studies reporting the presence of individual behavioral consistency (animal personality, behavioral syndrome) has boomed in the recent years, there is still much controversy about the proximate and ultimate mechanisms resulting in the phenomenon. For instance, direct environmental effects during ontogeny (phenotypic plasticity) as the proximate mechanism behind the emergence of consistent individual differences in behavior are usually overlooked compared to environmental effects operating across generations (genetic adaptation). Here, we tested the effects of sociality and perceived predation risk during ontogeny on the strength of behavioral consistency in agile frog (Rana dalmatina) tadpoles in a factorial common garden experiment. Tadpoles reared alone and without predatory cues showed zero repeatability within (i.e., lack of personality) and zero correlation between (i.e., lack of syndrome) activity and risk-taking. On the other hand, cues from predators alone induced both activity and risk-taking personalities, while cues from predators and conspecifics together resulted in an activity - risk-taking behavioral syndrome. Our results show that individual experience has an unequivocal role in the emergence of behavioral consistency. In this particular case, the development of behavioral consistency was most likely the result of genotype×environment interactions, or with other words, individual variation in behavioral plasticity.

Highlights

  • Studying behavioral consistency has recently become a central topic of evolutionary behavioral ecology, aiming to understand the evolutionary and developmental mechanisms behind consistent individual differences in behavior

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • As previous studies showed that amphibians provide good models for behavioral consistency research (Sih et al 2003; Wilson and Krause 2012; Urszan et al 2015), we studied agile frog (Rana dalmatina Fitzinger in Bonaparte, 1839; Fig 1) tadpoles

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Summary

Introduction

Studying behavioral consistency has recently become a central topic of evolutionary behavioral ecology, aiming to understand the evolutionary and developmental mechanisms behind consistent individual differences in behavior. Behavioral consistency can be approached and quantified at two levels (Garamszegi and Herczeg 2012; Jandt et al 2014; Urszan et al 2015): First, individuals can consistently differ in certain behaviors (in aggression, for instance), and second, individuals can consistently differ across two or more functionally different behaviors (across aggression, exploration, and risk-taking, for instance). Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

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