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Blood Parasite Infection Intensity Covaries with Risk‐Taking Personality in Male Carpetan Rock Lizards (Iberolacerta cyreni)
Authors:Gergely Horváth  José Martín  Pilar López  László Zsolt Garamszegi  Péter Bertók  Gábor Herczeg
Institution:1. Behavioural Ecology Group, Department of Systematic Zoology and Ecology, E?tv?s Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary;2. Departmento de Ecología Evolutiva, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, Madrid, Spain;3. Department of Evolutionary Ecology, Estación Biológica de Dona?a‐CSIC, Seville, Spain;4. Faculty of Veterinary Sciences, Szent István University, Budapest, Hungary
Abstract:Identifying evolutionary and developmental mechanisms underlying consistent between‐individual differences in behaviour is the main goal in ‘animal personality studies’. Here, we explored whether activity and risk‐taking varied consistently between individuals and correlated to various – potentially fitness linked – male traits in Carpetan rock lizards (Iberolacerta cyreni). Lizards showed significant consistency within both behaviours, implying the presence of activity and risk‐taking personalities. However, there were no correlation between activity and risk‐taking, neither on the between‐ nor on the within‐individual levels, implying the absence of a behavioural syndrome. We found a strong link between the intensity of blood parasite (Haemogregarinidae) infection and risk‐taking: lizards with higher infection intensity took more risk. While we cannot distinguish cause from causative in the parasite intensity – risk‐taking correlation – our results are in line with the asset protection hypothesis predicting that individuals with lower future reproductive value should focus on the current reproductive event and take higher risk.
Keywords:animal personality  behavioural syndrome  behavioural type  individual quality  lizard  temperament
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