4.5 Article

Exploratory behavior undergoes genotype-age interactions in a wild bird

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 9, Issue 16, Pages 8987-8994

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.5430

Keywords

animal model; development; genotype-age interaction; heritability; personality; plasticity

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland [289456]
  2. Academy of Finland (AKA) [289456, 289456] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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Animal personality traits are often heritable and plastic at the same time. Indeed, behaviors that reflect an individual's personality can respond to environmental factors or change with age. To date, little is known regarding personality changes during a wild animals' lifetime and even less about stability in heritability of behavior across ages. In this study, we investigated age-related changes in the mean and in the additive genetic variance of exploratory behavior, a commonly used measure of animal personality, in a wild population of great tits. Heritability of exploration is reduced in adults compared to juveniles, with a low genetic correlation across these age classes. A random regression animal model confirmed the occurrence of genotype-age interactions (GxA) in exploration, causing a decrease in additive genetic variance before individuals become 1 year old, and a decline in cross-age genetic correlations between young and increasingly old individuals. Of the few studies investigating GxA in behaviors, this study provides rare evidence for this phenomenon in an extensively studied behavior. We indeed demonstrate that heritability and cross-age genetic correlations in this behavior are not stable over an individual's lifetime, which can affect its potential response to selection. Because GxA is likely to be common in behaviors and have consequences for our understanding of the evolution of animal personality, more attention should be turned to this phenomenon in the future work.

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