Repeatability of circadian behavioural variation revealed in free-ranging marine fish

Repeatable between-individual differences in the behavioural manifestation of underlying circadian rhythms determine chronotypes in humans and terrestrial animals. Here, we have repeatedly measured three circadian behaviours, awakening time, rest onset and rest duration, in the free-ranging pearly r...

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Main Authors: Josep Alós, Martina Martorell-Barceló, Andrea Campos-Candela
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2017-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160791
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spelling doaj-40bebde8a8db498abf23fc4736e6e4132020-11-25T03:56:48ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032017-01-014210.1098/rsos.160791160791Repeatability of circadian behavioural variation revealed in free-ranging marine fishJosep AlósMartina Martorell-BarcelóAndrea Campos-CandelaRepeatable between-individual differences in the behavioural manifestation of underlying circadian rhythms determine chronotypes in humans and terrestrial animals. Here, we have repeatedly measured three circadian behaviours, awakening time, rest onset and rest duration, in the free-ranging pearly razorfish, Xyrithchys novacula, facilitated by acoustic tracking technology and hidden Markov models. In addition, daily travelled distance, a standard measure of daily activity as fish personality trait, was repeatedly assessed using a State-Space Model. We have decomposed the variance of these four behavioural traits using linear mixed models and estimated repeatability scores (R) while controlling for environmental co-variates: year of experimentation, spatial location of the activity, fish size and gender and their interactions. Between- and within-individual variance decomposition revealed significant Rs in all traits suggesting high predictability of individual circadian behavioural variation and the existence of chronotypes. The decomposition of the correlations among chronotypes and the personality trait studied here into between- and within-individual correlations did not reveal any significant correlation at between-individual level. We therefore propose circadian behavioural variation as an independent axis of the fish personality, and the study of chronotypes and their consequences as a novel dimension in understanding within-species fish behavioural diversity.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160791acoustic trackingcircadian clocksbehavioural syndromechronotypeshidden markov modelsrepeatability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Josep Alós
Martina Martorell-Barceló
Andrea Campos-Candela
spellingShingle Josep Alós
Martina Martorell-Barceló
Andrea Campos-Candela
Repeatability of circadian behavioural variation revealed in free-ranging marine fish
Royal Society Open Science
acoustic tracking
circadian clocks
behavioural syndrome
chronotypes
hidden markov models
repeatability
author_facet Josep Alós
Martina Martorell-Barceló
Andrea Campos-Candela
author_sort Josep Alós
title Repeatability of circadian behavioural variation revealed in free-ranging marine fish
title_short Repeatability of circadian behavioural variation revealed in free-ranging marine fish
title_full Repeatability of circadian behavioural variation revealed in free-ranging marine fish
title_fullStr Repeatability of circadian behavioural variation revealed in free-ranging marine fish
title_full_unstemmed Repeatability of circadian behavioural variation revealed in free-ranging marine fish
title_sort repeatability of circadian behavioural variation revealed in free-ranging marine fish
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Repeatable between-individual differences in the behavioural manifestation of underlying circadian rhythms determine chronotypes in humans and terrestrial animals. Here, we have repeatedly measured three circadian behaviours, awakening time, rest onset and rest duration, in the free-ranging pearly razorfish, Xyrithchys novacula, facilitated by acoustic tracking technology and hidden Markov models. In addition, daily travelled distance, a standard measure of daily activity as fish personality trait, was repeatedly assessed using a State-Space Model. We have decomposed the variance of these four behavioural traits using linear mixed models and estimated repeatability scores (R) while controlling for environmental co-variates: year of experimentation, spatial location of the activity, fish size and gender and their interactions. Between- and within-individual variance decomposition revealed significant Rs in all traits suggesting high predictability of individual circadian behavioural variation and the existence of chronotypes. The decomposition of the correlations among chronotypes and the personality trait studied here into between- and within-individual correlations did not reveal any significant correlation at between-individual level. We therefore propose circadian behavioural variation as an independent axis of the fish personality, and the study of chronotypes and their consequences as a novel dimension in understanding within-species fish behavioural diversity.
topic acoustic tracking
circadian clocks
behavioural syndrome
chronotypes
hidden markov models
repeatability
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160791
work_keys_str_mv AT josepalos repeatabilityofcircadianbehaviouralvariationrevealedinfreerangingmarinefish
AT martinamartorellbarcelo repeatabilityofcircadianbehaviouralvariationrevealedinfreerangingmarinefish
AT andreacamposcandela repeatabilityofcircadianbehaviouralvariationrevealedinfreerangingmarinefish
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