Abstract

One aspect of animal personality that has been well described in captivity, but received only little attention in studies in the wild, is that personality types may vary in their behavioural flexibility towards environmental changes. A fundamental factor underlying such differences is believed to be the degree to which individual behavior is guided by environmental stimuli. We tested this hypothesis in the wild using free-ranging great tits. Personality variation was quantified using exploratory behaviour in a novel environment, which has previously been shown to be repeatable and correlated with other behaviours in this and other populations of the same species. By temporarily removing food at feeding stations we examined whether birds with different personality differed in returning to visit empty feeders as this may provide information on how birds continue to sample their environment after a sudden change in conditions. In two summer experiments, we found that fast-exploring juveniles visited empty feeders less often compared to slow-exploring juveniles. In winter, sampling behaviour was sex dependent but not related to personality. In both seasons, we found that birds who sampled empty feeders more often were more likely to rediscover food after we again re-baited the feeding stations, but there was no effect of personality. Our results show that personality types may indeed differ in ways of collecting environmental information, which is consistent with the view of personalities as different styles of coping with environmental changes. The adaptive value of these alternative behavioural tactics, however, needs to be further explored.

Highlights

  • The concept of animal personality or temperament is generally used to describe the predictable manner in which individuals respond to challenging or novel situations

  • Taking into account the effects of year and site, we found that exploratory behaviour correlated negatively with overall sampling rates (Table 2; see Figure 3 for relationships at different feeders in each year)

  • The negative relationship between exploratory behaviour and sampling rate was especially pronounced on the first day of food removal (F1, 103 = 10.36, p = 0.002, b 6 s.e. = 20.1160.03) and showed an interaction with days since food removal (p = 0.019, table 3, figure 3), indicating that the relationship between exploratory behaviour and sampling rate changed over time

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of animal personality or temperament (i.e., consistent and correlated individual differences in behaviour) is generally used to describe the predictable manner in which individuals respond to challenging or novel situations. These alternative response patterns allow individuals to be quantified along behavioural axes of aggressiveness, social tolerance, boldness or novelty seeking [1] with individuals on the extremes of these axes often being categorized as behavioural phenotypes having more proactive (e.g. aggressive, bold) or reactive (e.g. docile, riskaverse) coping strategies [2,3]. How personality differences measured in captivity can predict such patterns in the wild still remains poorly understood

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