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Ecological implications of behavioural syndromes
Authors:Sih Andrew  Cote Julien  Evans Mara  Fogarty Sean  Pruitt Jonathan
Institution:Department of Environmental Science and Policy, University of California at Davis, CA 95616, USA. asih@ucdavis.edu
Abstract:Interspecific trait variation has long served as a conceptual foundation for our understanding of ecological patterns and dynamics. In particular, ecologists recognise the important role that animal behaviour plays in shaping ecological processes. An emerging area of interest in animal behaviour, the study of behavioural syndromes (animal personalities) considers how limited behavioural plasticity, as well as behavioural correlations affects an individual's fitness in diverse ecological contexts. In this article we explore how insights from the concept and study of behavioural syndromes provide fresh understanding of major issues in population ecology. We identify several general mechanisms for how population ecology phenomena can be influenced by a species or population's average behavioural type, by within-species variation in behavioural type, or by behavioural correlations across time or across ecological contexts. We note, in particular, the importance of behavioural type-dependent dispersal in spatial ecology. We then review recent literature and provide new syntheses for how these general mechanisms produce novel insights on five major issues in population ecology: (1) limits to species' distribution and abundance; (2) species interactions; (3) population dynamics; (4) relative responses to human-induced rapid environmental change; and (5) ecological invasions.
Keywords:Animal personalities  behavioural syndromes  dispersal  distribution and abundance  ecological invasions  environmental change  intraspecific variation  population dynamics  spatial ecology  species interactions
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