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Movement modeling and patterns of within- and among-individual behavioral variation across time scales in neonate garter snakes (Thamnophis elegans)

Animal movement modeling and animal personality frameworks are both useful approaches to identify patterns of behavioral variation. Yet these approaches are seldom applied jointly, especially in the context of a controlled laboratory experiment. In this study, we combine these approaches to identify...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Behavioral ecology and sociobiology 2021-12, Vol.75 (12), p.1-17, Article 162
Main Authors: Gangloff, Eric J., Leos-Barajas, Vianey, Demuth, Gabriel, Zhang, Haozhe, Kelly, Clint D., Bronikowski, Anne M.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Animal movement modeling and animal personality frameworks are both useful approaches to identify patterns of behavioral variation. Yet these approaches are seldom applied jointly, especially in the context of a controlled laboratory experiment. In this study, we combine these approaches to identify patterns in the behavior of neonate snakes at different time scales (within several minutes of a trial and across the days of the experiment). Specifically, we utilize Bayesian hierarchical hidden Markov models on fine-scale movement data and Bayesian mixed linear models on additional behavioral data (average movement speed, tongue-flick rate, latency to emerge, and area explored) measured repeatedly in captive-born western terrestrial garter snakes (Thamnophis elegans). This novel approach identified distinct behavioral states that describe movement patterns and predictable patterns of transitions in behavioral states at different time scales. Snakes exhibited consistent among-individual variation for all traits, and behaviors were correlated across contexts. Patterns of behavioral changes over time demonstrate responsiveness consistent with habituation, a basic form of learning, but snakes did not learn to associate a novel object with a simulated attack. Our unique approach provides a useful case study in how the joint application of statistical methodologies often relegated to different fields can be leveraged to describe personality axes and to characterize shifts in behavior at short (minutes) and long (across days) time scales in an experimental design context.
ISSN:0340-5443
1432-0762
DOI:10.1007/s00265-021-03099-w