Growth‐mortality tradeoffs and ‘personality traits’ in animals
University of California, Davis
Abstract
Consistent individual differences in boldness, reactivity, aggressiveness, and other 'personality traits' in animals are stable within individuals but vary across individuals, for reasons which are currently obscure. Here, I suggest that consistent individual differences in growth rates encourage consistent individual differences in behavior patterns that contribute to growth-mortality tradeoffs. This hypothesis predicts that behavior patterns that increase both growth and mortality rates (e.g. foraging under predation risk, aggressive defense of feeding territories) will be positively correlated with one another across individuals, that selection for high growth rates will increase mean levels of potentially…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 58.24
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 81
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Boldness
- Foraging
- Biology
- Ecology
- Predation
- Big Five personality traits
- Personality
- Behavioral syndrome
- Good health and well-being