Data from: Individual phenotypic variability in the behaviour of an aggregative riverine fish is structured along a reactive-proactive axis (THERMOS_FishExp_Behaviour)
High phenotypic diversity should provide populations with resilience to environmental change by increasing their capacity to respond to changing conditions. The aim of this study was to identify whether there is consistency in individual behaviours on a reactive-proactive axis in European barbel Bar...
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Zusammenfassung: | High phenotypic diversity should provide populations with resilience to
environmental change by increasing their capacity to respond to changing
conditions. The aim of this study was to identify whether there is
consistency in individual behaviours on a reactive-proactive axis in
European barbel Barbus barbus ("barbel"), which is a riverine
and aggregatory fish that expresses individual differences in its
behaviours in nature. This was tested using three sequential experiments
in ex-situ conditions that required individuals to leave a shelter and
then explore new habitats (‘open-field test’), respond to social stimuli
(‘mirror-image stimulation test’) and forage (‘foraging behaviour test’;
assessing shy-bold traits). Each suite of experiments was replicated three
times per individual. There was high variability in behaviours both within
and among individuals. The most repeatable behaviours were latency to exit
the shelter, active time in the shelter, and the number of food items
consumed. Principal component scores did, however, indicate a range of
consistent behavioural phenotypes across the individuals, distributing
them along a reactive-proactive axis in which most of individuals were
more reactive phenotypes (shyer, less exploratory, less social). These
results suggest that within controlled conditions, barbel express
considerable phenotypic diversity in their behaviour, suggesting they will
have some adaptive capacity to environmental change within their
populations. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.jh9w0vtm6 |