Individual variation in behaviour: personality and performance of brown trout in the wild
Abstract
Individuals from the same population often show very different behaviour. These differences, when consistent across time, are referred to as animal personality or behavioural syndromes. Explaining the occurrence of animal personality from an evolutionary perspective has however proven a difficult issue to tackle. This thesis studies aspects of individual behavioural variation and personality in brown trout (Salmo trutta). More specifically, I investigate (1) to what extent variation in behaviour is consistent within and across contexts, (2) environmental and genetic effects on behaviour, (3) how this affects performance in the wild, and (4) whether this understanding can be used to improve rearing methods of supplementary hatcheries.
I found brown trout to express a wide variation of behaviours and provide evidence that much of this behavioural variation is associated in bigger behavioural syndromes. As a result, separate behaviours of brown trout cannot be considered as isolated units, but combine into clusters that sometimes are associated with non-behavioural measures such as body size or growth rate. Variation was further influenced by both inherited and environmental effects. First, individuals from different maternal and paternal origin differed in size, aggressiveness and response to novel prey or novel food. These results suggest that maternal and/or genetic effects influence behaviour and growth in brown trout (I). Second, reduced rearing densities in a hatchery increased the response to novel prey, food search ability in a maze and predator response (II). And third, hatchery trout were more successful foragers than wild conspecifics, yet showed less repeatable explorative behaviour across time (III). Personality traits were generally poor predictors of growth and survival upon release, suggesting that several behavioural strategies can be successful in nature. Nevertheless, in paper IV, slow exploring individuals grew faster than more bold trout. Furthermore, parr reared at reduced densities were twice as likely to survive in the stream as trout reared at high densities.
In conclusion, my results contradict simple associations between risk taking behaviour and growth-mortality tradeoffs under natural conditions. This challenges the recent view that individual differences in growth strategies can explain variation in behaviour and suggests more heterogeneous links between personality and life-history in nature (V). In addition, I show that reduced rearing hatchery densities facilitate the development of adaptive behaviour in brown trout, a finding that may have implications for current rearing methods in supplementary hatcheries.
Parts of work
I Höjesjö J, Adriaenssens B, Bohlin T & Johnsson IJ. Behavioural syndromes in juvenile
brown trout (Salmo trutta); life history, family variation and performance in the wild. II Brockmark S, Adriaenssens B & Johnsson JI. Less is more: density influences the
development of behavioural life skills in trout. [Proceedings of the Royal Society of London
Series B-Biological Sciences, in press] ::doi::10.1098/rspb.2010.0561 III Adriaenssens B & Johnnson JI. Learning and context-specific exploration behaviour in
hatchery and wild brown trout. IV Adriaenssens B & Johnsson JI. No favors for the reckless: do personality traits predict fitness
of brown trout in the wild? V Adriaenssens B & Johnsson JI 2009. Personality and life-history productivity: consistent or
variable association? [letter to Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 24: 179-180] ::doi::10.1016/j.tree.2008.12.003
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Science
Institution
Department of Zoology ; Zoologiska institutionen
Disputation
Friday the 28th of May 2010, 10:00 am, Department of Zoology, Medicinaregatan 18A
Date of defence
2010-05-28
bart.adriaenssens@zool.gu.se
Date
2010-05-07Author
Adriaenssens, Bart
Keywords
behavioural syndromes
personality
life-history
boldness
hatchery
survival
growth
foraging
anti-predator behaviour
learning
brown trout
Publication type
Doctoral Theses
ISBN
978-91-628-8077-4
Language
eng