2019
DOI: 10.1111/ele.13438
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Individual differences in behaviour explain variation in survival: a meta‐analysis

Abstract: Research focusing on among‐individual differences in behaviour (‘animal personality’) has been blooming for over a decade. Central theories explaining the maintenance of such behavioural variation posits that individuals expressing greater “risky” behaviours should suffer higher mortality. Here, for the first time, we synthesize the existing empirical evidence for this key prediction. Our results did not support this prediction as there was no directional relationship between riskier behaviour and greater mort… Show more

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Cited by 229 publications
(210 citation statements)
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References 75 publications
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“…Luttbeg & Sih, 2010). These adaptive interpretations contrast with a recent meta-analysis showing that riskier behavioural types tended to have higher survival in the wild (Moiron, Laskowski, & Niemelä, 2020), which may highlight a distinction between behavioural variation due to personality trait differences and due to state-dependent effects.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 87%
“…Luttbeg & Sih, 2010). These adaptive interpretations contrast with a recent meta-analysis showing that riskier behavioural types tended to have higher survival in the wild (Moiron, Laskowski, & Niemelä, 2020), which may highlight a distinction between behavioural variation due to personality trait differences and due to state-dependent effects.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 87%
“…While myriad studies have established the importance of prey traits for predator-prey interactions [3,17,19], these studies are typically focused at either the individual level within a natural selection context [3] or at the community level within a species selection context [45]. Such traditional approaches overlook the ecological effects of population-or group-level trait variance [11], a potential key property linking the traits of individuals to communities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The importance of prey traits for predatory interactions spans multiple biological scales. For example, predators exert selection on prey populations by preferentially consuming individuals with certain trait values [1][2][3][4][5][6], but also modify community structure by disproportionally consuming one prey species over another [7]. This latter effect is often ascribed to mean, species-level trait differences [8][9][10].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While between‐individual changes were an unlikely cause of age‐related decline in boldness in this F1 captive‐reared population, different mechanisms may be at work in natural populations. Indeed, maintaining animals in laboratories often involves providing ad libitum food and ensuring the absence of predators and pathogens, but such conditions may disrupt the relationship between behaviour and survival (Moiron, Laskowski, & Niemelä, 2020). In this context, typically harsher natural conditions provide useful set‐ups to investigate the role of between‐individual patterns.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%