Personality and the emergence of the pace-of-life syndrome concept at the population level
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Abstract
The pace-of-life syndrome (POLS) hypothesis specifies that closely related species or populations experiencing different ecological conditions should differ in a suite of metabolic, hormonal and immunity traits that have coevolved with the life-history particularities related to these conditions. Surprisingly, two important dimensions of the POLS concept have been neglected: (i) despite increasing evidence for numerous connections between behavioural, physiological and life-history traits, behaviours have rarely been considered in the POLS yet; (ii) the POLS could easily be applied to the study of covariation among traits between individuals within a population. In this paper, we propose that consistent behavioural differences among individuals, or personality, covary with life history and physiological differences at the within-population, interpopulation and interspecific levels. We discuss how the POLS provides a heuristic framework in which personality studies can be integrated to address how variation in personality traits is maintained within populations.
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The record
- Venue
- Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences
- Topic
- Animal Behavior and Reproduction
- Field
- Agricultural and Biological Sciences
- Canadian institutions
- McGill UniversityUniversité de SherbrookeUniversité du Québec à Montréal
- Funders
- —
- Keywords
- Life history theoryPersonalityBig Five personality traitsPopulationInterspecific competitionPsychologyBiologyLife historyEcologySocial psychologyDemographySociology
- Has abstract in OpenAlex
- yes