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Behavioural trade-offs between growth and mortality explain evolution of submaximal growth rates

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journal contribution
posted on 2006-09-01, 00:00 authored by Peter BiroPeter Biro, M Abrahams, J Post, E Parkinson
1. The importance of body size and growth rate in ecological interactions is widely recognized, and both are frequently used as surrogates for fitness. However, if there are significant costs associated with rapid growth rates then its fitness benefits may be questioned.

2. In replicated whole-lake experiments, we show that a domestic strain of rainbow trout (artificially selected for maximum intrinsic growth rate) use productive but risky habitats more than wild trout. Consequently, domestic trout grow faster in all situations, experience greater survival in the absence of predators, but have lower survival in the presence of predators. Therefore, rapid growth rates are selected against due to increased foraging effort (or conversely, lower antipredator behaviour) that increases vulnerability to predators. In other words, there is a behaviourally mediated trade-off between growth and mortality rates.

3. Whereas rapid growth is beneficial in many ecological interactions, our results show the mortality costs of achieving it are large in the presence of predators, which can help explain the absence of an average phenotype with maximized growth rates in nature.

History

Journal

Journal of animal ecology

Volume

75

Issue

5

Pagination

1165 - 1171

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing

Location

Oxford, England

ISSN

0021-8790

eISSN

1365-2656

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2006, The Authors