Personality, body condition and breeding experience drive sociality in a facultatively social bird

Adopting different behavioural strategies may reduce within-group conflict, selecting for behavioural consistency ('personality'). Personality may also affect grouping tendencies. The relationship between the personality dimensions sociability and boldness nevertheless remains unclear. Thi...

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Main Authors: Öst, Markus, Seltmann, Martin, Jaatinen, Kim
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Fid
Online Access:https://research.abo.fi/en/publications/ad3783f9-1248-4c71-bf14-be6c2ab1df76
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spelling ftaboakademicris:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/ad3783f9-1248-4c71-bf14-be6c2ab1df76 2024-06-09T07:49:33+00:00 Personality, body condition and breeding experience drive sociality in a facultatively social bird Öst, Markus Seltmann, Martin Jaatinen, Kim 2015 https://research.abo.fi/en/publications/ad3783f9-1248-4c71-bf14-be6c2ab1df76 und unknown https://research.abo.fi/en/publications/ad3783f9-1248-4c71-bf14-be6c2ab1df76 info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Öst , M , Seltmann , M & Jaatinen , K 2015 , ' Personality, body condition and breeding experience drive sociality in a facultatively social bird ' , Animal Behaviour , vol. 100 , pp. 166–173 . article 2015 ftaboakademicris 2024-05-16T14:15:22Z Adopting different behavioural strategies may reduce within-group conflict, selecting for behavioural consistency ('personality'). Personality may also affect grouping tendencies. The relationship between the personality dimensions sociability and boldness nevertheless remains unclear. This knowledge gap may reflect a failure to consider potential trade-offs between avoiding conspecifics, potentially alleviating social stress, and avoiding predation. Furthermore, the effects of personality and state (e.g. body condition or age affecting the costs and benefits of behavioural actions) on cooperativeness should be considered together. This is because state may explain predation vulnerability, which may affect boldness under predation risk, and thus antipredator grouping tendencies. To address the problem, we determined how group size preference and group-forming time depended on boldness (flight initiation distance, FID, in response to an approaching human), body condition and breeding experience in facultatively social eiders, Somateria mollissima, where females form coalitions or care for the young solitarily. Breeding adults and young are subject to high predation pressure, providing a strong incentive for brood-tending females to cooperate. Because hormonal differences may also explain differences in sociability, we included baseline and handling-induced serum corticosterone concentrations of incubating females as potential predictors of sociability. We also statistically controlled for availability of potential partners. The relationship between boldness (FID) and the number of coalition partners ranged from negative (females in poor body condition) to positive (females in good body condition), arguing against a uniform relationship between boldness and sociability. The number of coalition partners decreased with female breeding experience. The time taken to form a coalition was shortest close to the hatching peak in the population. Shyness (long FID) delayed group formation. Despite a need for safety in ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Somateria mollissima Åbo Akademi University Research Portal Fid ENVELOPE(-65.939,-65.939,-68.664,-68.664)
institution Open Polar
collection Åbo Akademi University Research Portal
op_collection_id ftaboakademicris
language unknown
description Adopting different behavioural strategies may reduce within-group conflict, selecting for behavioural consistency ('personality'). Personality may also affect grouping tendencies. The relationship between the personality dimensions sociability and boldness nevertheless remains unclear. This knowledge gap may reflect a failure to consider potential trade-offs between avoiding conspecifics, potentially alleviating social stress, and avoiding predation. Furthermore, the effects of personality and state (e.g. body condition or age affecting the costs and benefits of behavioural actions) on cooperativeness should be considered together. This is because state may explain predation vulnerability, which may affect boldness under predation risk, and thus antipredator grouping tendencies. To address the problem, we determined how group size preference and group-forming time depended on boldness (flight initiation distance, FID, in response to an approaching human), body condition and breeding experience in facultatively social eiders, Somateria mollissima, where females form coalitions or care for the young solitarily. Breeding adults and young are subject to high predation pressure, providing a strong incentive for brood-tending females to cooperate. Because hormonal differences may also explain differences in sociability, we included baseline and handling-induced serum corticosterone concentrations of incubating females as potential predictors of sociability. We also statistically controlled for availability of potential partners. The relationship between boldness (FID) and the number of coalition partners ranged from negative (females in poor body condition) to positive (females in good body condition), arguing against a uniform relationship between boldness and sociability. The number of coalition partners decreased with female breeding experience. The time taken to form a coalition was shortest close to the hatching peak in the population. Shyness (long FID) delayed group formation. Despite a need for safety in ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Öst, Markus
Seltmann, Martin
Jaatinen, Kim
spellingShingle Öst, Markus
Seltmann, Martin
Jaatinen, Kim
Personality, body condition and breeding experience drive sociality in a facultatively social bird
author_facet Öst, Markus
Seltmann, Martin
Jaatinen, Kim
author_sort Öst, Markus
title Personality, body condition and breeding experience drive sociality in a facultatively social bird
title_short Personality, body condition and breeding experience drive sociality in a facultatively social bird
title_full Personality, body condition and breeding experience drive sociality in a facultatively social bird
title_fullStr Personality, body condition and breeding experience drive sociality in a facultatively social bird
title_full_unstemmed Personality, body condition and breeding experience drive sociality in a facultatively social bird
title_sort personality, body condition and breeding experience drive sociality in a facultatively social bird
publishDate 2015
url https://research.abo.fi/en/publications/ad3783f9-1248-4c71-bf14-be6c2ab1df76
long_lat ENVELOPE(-65.939,-65.939,-68.664,-68.664)
geographic Fid
geographic_facet Fid
genre Somateria mollissima
genre_facet Somateria mollissima
op_source Öst , M , Seltmann , M & Jaatinen , K 2015 , ' Personality, body condition and breeding experience drive sociality in a facultatively social bird ' , Animal Behaviour , vol. 100 , pp. 166–173 .
op_relation https://research.abo.fi/en/publications/ad3783f9-1248-4c71-bf14-be6c2ab1df76
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
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