Intraindividual variability of boldness is repeatable across contexts in a wild lizard

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Abstract

Animals do not behave in exactly the same way when repeatedly tested in the same context or situation, even once systematic variation, such as habituation, has been controlled for. This unpredictability is called intraindividual variability (IIV) and has been little studied in animals. Here we investigated how IIV in boldness (estimated by flight initiation distances) changed across two seasons-the dry, non-breeding season and the wet, breeding season-in a wild population of the Namibian rock agama, Agama planiceps. We found significant differences in IIV both between individuals and seasons, and IIV was higher in the wet season, suggesting plasticity in IIV. Further, IIV was highly repeatable (r = 0.61) between seasons and we found strong negative correlations between consistent individual differences in flight initiation distances, i.e. their boldness, and individuals' IIVs. We suggest that to understand personality in animals, researchers should generate a personality 'profile' that includes not only the relative level of a trait (i.e. its personality), but also its plasticity and variability under natural conditions. © 2014 Highcock and Carter.

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APA

Highcock, L., & Carter, A. J. (2014). Intraindividual variability of boldness is repeatable across contexts in a wild lizard. PLoS ONE, 9(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0095179

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