Do personalities co-vary with metabolic expenditure and glucocorticoid stress response in adult lizards?

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Mell, Hugo | Josserand, Rémy | Decencière, Beatriz | Artacho, Paulina | Meylan, Sandrine | Le Galliard, Jean-François

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

International audience. Stable differences in physiology among individuals may facilitate the evolution of consistent individual differences in behavior. In particular, according to the pace-of-life syndrome (POLS) hypothesis, individual variation in metabolic expenditure and stress physiology should be linked with exploration, aggression, or risk taking behaviors. Previous studies have uncovered stable individual differences in metabolic expenditure and circulating glucorticoids in common lizards (Zootoca vivipara). We tested for correlations between standard metabolic rates (SMR), glucorticoid stress response and behavioral traits (activity, aggressiveness, risk taking and sociability) in males. In ectotherms, the thermal dependence of SMR should be included in the POLS hypothesis; we therefore measured SMR at three temperatures from rest to preferred body temperature. Activity, aggressiveness and risk taking, but not sociability, exhibited significant, short term repeatability, and little correlation was found between behavioral traits. The SMR of lizards with a low metabolism at rest increased faster with body temperature. The SMR at rest was negatively correlated with behavioral variation in sociability and activity but not with risk taking behavior. In addition, the plasma corticosterone level after an acute, handling stress increased slightly but not significantly with aggressiveness. We discuss alternative interpretations for these relationships and conclude that the link between inter-individual variation in physiology and behavior is trait-dependent in the common lizard.

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The allostatic load model describes how individuals maintain homeostasis in challenging environment and posits that costs induced by a chronic perturbation (i.e., allostatic load) are correlated to the secretion of glucocorticoids...

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