Neonate personality affects early-life resource acquisition in a large social mammal

Author:

Amin Bawan1ORCID,Jennings Dómhnall J2ORCID,Norman Alison1,Ryan Andrew1,Ioannidis Vasiliki1,Magee Alice1,Haughey Hayley-Anne1,Haigh Amy1ORCID,Ciuti Simone1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Wildlife Ecology and Behaviour, School of Biology and Environmental Science, University College Dublin , Dublin , Ireland

2. School of Biological Sciences, Queen’s University Belfast , Belfast , UK

Abstract

Abstract Although it is widely acknowledged that animal personality plays a key role in ecology, current debate focuses on the exact role of personality in mediating life-history trade-offs. Crucial for our understanding is the relationship between personality and resource acquisition, which is poorly understood, especially during early stages of development. Here we studied how among-individual differences in behavior develop over the first 6 months of life, and their potential association with resource acquisition in a free-ranging population of fallow deer (Dama dama). We related neonate physiological (heart rate) and behavioral (latency to leave at release) anti-predator responses to human handling to the proportion of time fawns spent scanning during their first summer and autumn of life. We then investigated whether there was a trade-off between scanning time and foraging time in these juveniles, and how it developed over their first 6 months of life. We found that neonates with longer latencies at capture (i.e., risk-takers) spent less time scanning their environment, but that this relationship was only present when fawns were 3–6 months old during autumn, and not when fawns were only 1–2 months old during summer. We also found that time spent scanning was negatively related to time spent foraging and that this relationship became stronger over time, as fawns gradually switch from a nutrition rich (milk) to a nutrition poor (grass) diet. Our results highlight a potential mechanistic pathway in which neonate personality may drive differences in early-life resource acquisition of a large social mammal.

Funder

Office of Public Works, Ireland

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

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