ORCID

Abstract

One explanation for animal personality is that different behavioural types derive from different life-history strategies. Highly productive individuals, with high growth rates and high fecundity, are assumed to live life at a fast pace showing high levels of boldness and risk taking, compared with less productive individuals. Here, we investigate among-individual differences in mean boldness (the inverse of the latency to recover from a startling stimulus) and in the consistency of boldness, in male hermit crabs in relation to two aspects of life-history investment. We assessed aerobic scope by measuring the concentration of the respiratory pigment haemocyanin, and we assessed fecundity by measuring spermatophore size. First, we found that individuals investing in large spermatophores also had high concentrations of haemocyanin. Using doubly hierarchical-generalized linear models to analyse longitudinal data on startle responses, we show that hermit crabs vary both in their mean response durations and in the consistency of their behaviour. Individual consistency was unrelated to haemocyanin concentration or spermatophore size, but mean startle response duration increased with spermatophore size. Thus, counter to expectations, it was the most risk-averse individuals, rather than the boldest and most risk prone, that were the most productive. We suggest that similar patterns should be present in other species, if the most productive individuals avoid risky behaviour.

DOI

10.1098/rspb.2014.2492

Publication Date

2015-03-22

Publication Title

Proc Biol Sci

Volume

282

Issue

1803

Embargo Period

2016-03-22

Organisational Unit

School of Biological and Marine Sciences

Keywords

boldness, consistency, fecundity, intraindividual variation, personality, predictability, Animals, Anomura, Behavior, Animal, Cell Size, Fertility, Hemocyanins, Male, Personality, Reflex, Startle, Spermatogonia

Share

COinS