In animal populations, as in humans, behavioural differences between individuals that are consistent over time and across contexts are considered to reflect personality, and suites of correlated behaviours expressed by individuals are known as behavioural syndromes. Lifelong stability of behavioural syndromes is often assumed, either implicitly or explicitly. Here, we use a quantitative genetic approach to study the developmental stability of a behavioural syndrome in a wild population of blue tits. We find that a behavioural syndrome formed by a strong genetic correlation of two personality traits in nestlings disappears in adults, and we demonstrate that genotype–age interaction is the likely mechanism underlying this change during develo...
Repeatable behaviors (i.e. animal personality) are pervasive in the animal kingdom and various mecha...
The need for evolutionary studies on quantitative traits that integrate genetics, development and fi...
Individuals of all vertebrate species differ consistently in their reactions to mildly stressful cha...
In animal populations, as in humans, behavioural differences between individuals that are consistent...
Animal personality traits are often heritable and plastic at the same time. Indeed, behaviors that r...
Abstract Animal personality traits are often heritable and plastic at the same time. Indeed, behavio...
Repeatable behaviors (i.e., animal personality) are pervasive in the animal kingdom and various mech...
Behavioural ecologists have proposed various evolutionary mechanisms as to why different personality...
Individuals within populations often show repeatable behavioural differences which reflect variation...
Behavioural ecologists have proposed various evolutionary mechanisms as to why different personality...
When several personality traits covary, they form a behavioral syndrome. Understanding the evolution...
How has evolution led to the variation in behavioural phenotypes (personalities) in a population? Kn...
Identifying the genes that underlie phenotypic variation in natural populations, and assessing the c...
Individuals in a range of species consistently differ in their behavior towards mild challenges, ove...
Behavioral differences between individuals that are consistent over time characterize animal persona...
Repeatable behaviors (i.e. animal personality) are pervasive in the animal kingdom and various mecha...
The need for evolutionary studies on quantitative traits that integrate genetics, development and fi...
Individuals of all vertebrate species differ consistently in their reactions to mildly stressful cha...
In animal populations, as in humans, behavioural differences between individuals that are consistent...
Animal personality traits are often heritable and plastic at the same time. Indeed, behaviors that r...
Abstract Animal personality traits are often heritable and plastic at the same time. Indeed, behavio...
Repeatable behaviors (i.e., animal personality) are pervasive in the animal kingdom and various mech...
Behavioural ecologists have proposed various evolutionary mechanisms as to why different personality...
Individuals within populations often show repeatable behavioural differences which reflect variation...
Behavioural ecologists have proposed various evolutionary mechanisms as to why different personality...
When several personality traits covary, they form a behavioral syndrome. Understanding the evolution...
How has evolution led to the variation in behavioural phenotypes (personalities) in a population? Kn...
Identifying the genes that underlie phenotypic variation in natural populations, and assessing the c...
Individuals in a range of species consistently differ in their behavior towards mild challenges, ove...
Behavioral differences between individuals that are consistent over time characterize animal persona...
Repeatable behaviors (i.e. animal personality) are pervasive in the animal kingdom and various mecha...
The need for evolutionary studies on quantitative traits that integrate genetics, development and fi...
Individuals of all vertebrate species differ consistently in their reactions to mildly stressful cha...