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What a difference a day makes-female behaviour is less predictable near ovulation.


ABSTRACT: 'Animal personalities' have been shown to exist in many species. Yet, fluctuations in the stability of these inter-individual behavioural differences are not well understood. Against this background, we wondered whether behavioural consistency over time is affected by the reproductive cycle. Female mice were tested twice at an interval of eight weeks in four paradigms assessing social interest as well as anxiety-like behaviour and exploratory locomotion. Twenty-two individuals were tested repeatedly near ovulation, whereas another twenty-two were tested repeatedly in the non-receptive phase. While we found no major behavioural effects at the group level, the reproductive state indeed had profound effects on behavioural stability over time: social interest as well as anxiety-like behaviour proved to be significantly less predictable near ovulation. It is generally believed that phenotypic plasticity is limited due to the costs it brings about. In this context, our data indicate that females accept higher costs in phases directly related to fitness maximization.

SUBMITTER: Kastner N 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5414256 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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What a difference a day makes-female behaviour is less predictable near ovulation.

Kästner Niklas N   Richter S Helene SH   Gamer Matthias M   Kaiser Sylvia S   Sachser Norbert N  

Royal Society open science 20170412 4


'Animal personalities' have been shown to exist in many species. Yet, fluctuations in the stability of these inter-individual behavioural differences are not well understood. Against this background, we wondered whether behavioural consistency over time is affected by the reproductive cycle. Female mice were tested twice at an interval of eight weeks in four paradigms assessing social interest as well as anxiety-like behaviour and exploratory locomotion. Twenty-two individuals were tested repeat  ...[more]

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