Samenvatting
Individuals with reduced body mass resulting from early nutritional stress often compensate for this
later in growth. This compensatory growth can be beneficial as individuals adjust their body mass to the
level of individuals that grew up under better conditions. Yet, compensatory growth can also result in
costs that are paid later in life. In zebra finches raised under different nutritional conditions, we tested
whether compensatory growth affects subsequent adult exploratory behaviour, a proxy for an avian
personality trait. We tested their exploratory behaviour in a spatial test to find hidden food on
2 consecutive days. The behavioural measures of exploration correlated with each other across time
showing a high individual behavioural consistency. Early nutritional treatment itself did not affect
exploration and feeding. Yet, birds with higher previous compensatory growth were less active and
approached the food with different latencies from birds with lower compensatory growth. Life history
decisions on whether to compensate for a bad start or stay small thus result in elementary differences in
behaviour, such as exploratory behaviour, with potential fitness consequences, depending on payoffs of
explorative strategies in different environmental conditions.
Originele taal-2 | Engels |
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Pagina's (van-tot) | 1295-1300 |
Tijdschrift | Animal Behaviour |
Volume | 81 |
Nummer van het tijdschrift | 6 |
DOI's | |
Status | Gepubliceerd - 2011 |