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Trait compensation between boldness and the propensity for tail autotomy under different food availabilities in similarly aged brown anole lizards

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TLDR
The relationship between risk-taking tendency (boldness) and the propensity for tail autotomy in the brown anole lizards Anolis sagrei was used to address two important questions regarding trait compensation.
Abstract
Summary 1. Trait compensation denotes the situation in which individuals offset the costs of one trait with the benefits of another trait. The phenomenon of trait compensation is best exemplified by a negative correlation between the degree of predator avoidance and the strength of morphological defence. 2. In this study, we used the relationship between risk-taking tendency (boldness) and the propensity for tail autotomy in the brown anole lizards Anolis sagrei to address two important questions regarding trait compensation. First, we investigated whether trait compensation existed among individuals of similar age. Second, we examined how the relationship between boldness and the propensity for tail autotomy responded to changes in food availability. 3. Overall, bolder individuals autotomized their tails more readily. Although mean values of boldness and the propensity for tail autotomy did not differ under high and low food availability, the compensatory effect between the two traits was only obvious when food was abundant. 4. The existence of trait compensation among similarly aged individuals will serve as the first step to understanding the evolution of compensatory effects among traits observed at higher level. In addition, food availability affected the dynamics of trait compensation by influencing the amount of variation of traits involved, rather than altering the mean values of traits per se.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Poor nutritional condition promotes high-risk behaviours: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: While heterogeneity among effect sizes was high, the results show that poor nutritional state on average increases risk taking in ecological contexts involving predation, novelty and exploration.
Journal ArticleDOI

The ecology and evolution of autotomy.

TL;DR: It is found that the ability to drop an appendage has evolved multiple times throughout Animalia and that once autotomy has evolved, selection appears to act on the removable appendage to increase the efficacy and/or efficiency of autotomy.
Book ChapterDOI

Personality and Individuality in Reptile Behavior

TL;DR: Research in lizards has mirrored findings reported for other vertebrates, focusing on one or more of five traits: shyness–boldness, exploration-avoidance, activity, sociability, conspecific aggression, and possible relationships among them, and methodology and statistical analyses used to study these traits are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bigger babies are bolder: effects of body size on personality of hatchling snakes

TL;DR: The link between size and boldness suggests that the survival advantage of larger offspring size in this population may be driven by snake behaviour as well as morphology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Individual boldness is linked to protective shell shape in aquatic snails

TL;DR: The authors' analyses find a strong relationship between risk-taking propensity and shell shape in this species, with bolder individuals exhibiting a more defended shell shape than shy individuals, which supports the ‘phenotypic compensation’ hypothesis and sheds light on a previously poorly studied mechanism to promote the maintenance of personality variation among animals.
References
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