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Curr Zool
2017 Dec 01;636:633-638. doi: 10.1093/cz/zow116.
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Smaller and bolder prey snails have higher survival in staged encounters with the sea star Pisaster giganteus.
Foster WC
,
Armstrong CM
,
Chism GT
,
Pruitt JN
.
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Temporally consistent individual differences in behavior, also known as animal personality, can have large impacts on individual fitness. Here, we explore the degree to which individual differences in anti-predator response (or boldness) influence survival rates in groups of snails Chlorostoma funebralis when they encounter a predatory sea star Pisaster giganteus. The snail C. funebralis shows consistent individual variation in predator response where some fearful snails actively flee bodies of water occupied by predators whereas bolder snails consistently do not. We show here that bold snails are significantly more likely to survive encounters with a predatory sea star and, somewhat counterintuitively, fearful snails actually suffer higher mortality rates. We also found that smaller snails and those occurring at higher experimental densities experienced higher per capita survival rates. Positive effects of prey boldness on survival are not uncommonly reported in the animal personality literature; however, such results are inconsistent with classic animal personality theory borrowed from the optimal foraging literature. The findings herein add to the growing body of evidence that consistent individual differences in behavior can impact predator-prey interactions and that boldness is potentially under positive predator-driven selection in some systems.
Figure 1. Box plots detailing the relationship between snail shell width and survival rates of C. funebralis in mesocosm trials. Dots represent putative outliers, lines represent 10th and 90th percentiles, gray boxes indicate the interquartile range, and the central line depicts the median.
Figure 2. Box plots showing differences in average height reached above water by surviving versus dead C. funebralis in our mesocosm trials. Dots represent putative outliers, lines represent 10th and 90th percentiles, gray boxes indicate the interquartile range, and the central line depicts the median.