학술논문

Spying on your neighbours? Social information affects timing of breeding and stress hormone levels in a colonial seabird
Original Paper
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Evolutionary Ecology. June 2021, Vol. 35 Issue 3, p463, 19 p.
Subject
Hormones
Decision making
Corticosterone
Stress (Psychology)
Decision-making
Language
English
ISSN
0269-7653
Abstract
Author(s): Anika Immer [sup.1], Thomas Merkling [sup.1] [sup.4], Olivier Chastel [sup.2], Scott A. Hatch [sup.3] [sup.5], Etienne Danchin [sup.1], Pierrick Blanchard [sup.1], Sarah Leclaire [sup.1] Author Affiliations: (1) grid.15781.3a, 0000 [...]
A good overlap between offspring energetic requirements and availability of resources is required for successful reproduction. Accordingly, individuals from numerous species fine-tune their timing of breeding by integrating cues that predict environmental conditions during the offspring period. Besides acquiring information from their direct interaction with the environment (personal information), individuals can integrate information by observing the behaviours or performance of others (social information). The use of social information is often beneficial because the accumulated knowledge of conspecifics may represent a source of information more reliable than the intrinsically more limited personal information. However, although social information constitutes the major source of information in a wide range of contexts, studies investigating its use in the context of timing of breeding are scarce. We investigated whether black-legged kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) used social information to adjust the timing of egg-laying. We manipulated social information using a food-supplementation experiment, known to advance kittiwakes' reproductive phenology. We expected food-supplemented and unsupplemented pairs to delay and advance, respectively, their timing of laying when surrounded by a majority of neighbours from the opposite food-treatment. However, both unsupplemented and food-supplemented kittiwakes delayed egg-laying when surrounded by a higher proportion of neighbours from the opposite food-treatment. This result shows that kittiwakes use social information to time egg-laying, but that it is not used to match the seasonal peak of food availability. We suggest that when social and personal cues give contradictory environmental information, individuals may benefit from delaying laying to gather more information to make better decisions about investment into eggs. Further, we explored a potential proximate mechanism for the pattern we report. We show that baseline corticosterone, known to mediate reproductive decisions, was lower in unsupplemented females facing a higher proportion of food-supplemented neighbours. Altogether, our results suggest that to fine-tune their timing of laying, kittiwakes use complex decision-making processes in which social and personal information interplay.