Boldness predicts plasticity in flight responses to winds

Author:

Gillies Natasha1ORCID,Weimerskirch Henri2ORCID,Thorley Jack1ORCID,Clay Thomas A.3ORCID,Martín López Lucía Martina14ORCID,Joo Rocío56ORCID,Basille Mathieu6ORCID,Patrick Samantha C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Environmental Sciences University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

2. Centre d'Étude Biologique de Chizé, CNRS UMR 7273 Villiers‐en‐Bois France

3. Institute of Marine Sciences University of California, Santa Cruz Santa Cruz California USA

4. Ipar Perspective Asociación Sopela Spain

5. Global Fishing Watch Washington District of Columbia USA

6. Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center University of Florida Davie Florida USA

Abstract

Abstract Behavioural plasticity can allow populations to adjust to environmental change when genetic evolution is too slow to keep pace. However, its constraints are not well understood. Personality is known to shape individual behaviour, but its relationship to behavioural plasticity is unclear. We studied the relationship between boldness and behavioural plasticity in response to wind conditions in wandering albatrosses (Diomedea exulans). We fitted multivariate hidden Markov models to an 11‐year GPS dataset collected from 294 birds to examine whether the probability of transitioning between behavioural states (rest, prey search and travel) varied in response to wind, boldness and their interaction. We found that movement decisions varied with boldness, with bolder birds showing preferences for travel, and shyer birds showing preferences for search. For females, these effects depended on wind speed. In strong winds, which are optimal for movement, females increased time spent in travel, while in weaker winds, shyer individuals showed a slight preference for search, while bolder individuals maintained preference for travel. Our findings suggest that individual variation in behavioural plasticity may limit the capacity of bolder females to adjust to variable conditions and highlight the important role of behavioural plasticity in population responses to climate change.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Human Frontier Science Program

Aneurysm and AVM Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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