Boldness in two perch populations - long-term differences and the effect of predation pressure
Authored by Carin Magnhagen, Gustav Hellstrom, Jost Borcherding, Martina Heynen
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2656.2012.02007.x
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Swedish Research Council
Carl Tryggers Foundation for Scientific Research
C.F. Lundström Foundation
Platforms:
R
STATISTICA
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
1. Populations of the same species often display different behaviours, for example, in their response to predators. The question is whether
this difference is developed as part of a divergent selection caused by
differences in predation pressure, or as a result of phenotypic
responses to current environmental conditions.
2. Two populations of Eurasian perch were investigated over a time span
of 6 years to see whether risk-taking behaviour in young-of-the-year
perch were consistent across cohorts, or if behaviour varied over time
with changes in predation regime.
3. Boldness was estimated in aquarium studies by looking at how the fish
made trade-offs between foraging in a risky area and staying in shelter.
Predation risk of each year and lake was estimated from fishing surveys, using an individual-based model calculating attack rates for
cannibalistic perch.
4. The average boldness scores were consistently lower in perch from
Fisksjon compared with those in Angersjon, although the magnitude of the
difference varied among years. Variance component analyses showed that
differences between lakes in boldness scores only explained 12 per cent
of the total variation. Differences between years were contributing at
least similarly or more to the total variance, and the variation was
higher in Fisksjon than in Angersjon.
5. The observed risk-taking behaviour of young-of-the-year perch, compared across cohorts, was significantly correlated with the
year-specific estimates of cannibalistic attack rates, with lower
boldness scores in years with higher predation pressure. In Fisksjon, with significant changes over the years in population structure, the
range of both predation risk and boldness scores was wider than in
Angersjon.
6. By following the two perch populations over several years, we have
been able to show that the differences in risk-taking behaviour mainly
are due to direct phenotypic responses to recent experience of predation
risk. Long-term differences in behaviour among perch populations thus
reflect consistent differences in predation regime rather than diverging
inherent traits.
Tags
Decision-Making
Natural-selection
Antipredator behavior
Eurasian perch
Risk-taking behavior
The-year perch
Animal
personality
Realized heritability
Avian personalities
Body depth