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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Behavioural Syndromes: Implications for Electrocommunication in a Weakly Electric Fish Species

Shank, Isabelle 14 May 2013 (has links)
Behavioural syndromes, defined as suites of correlated behaviours across different contexts, are used to characterize individual variability in behaviours. Males of the weakly electric fish species, Apteronotus leptorhynchus, produce electro-communication signals called chirps. Chirps are thought to be involved in agonistic signalling, as their relative incidence increases during agonistic conspecific interactions. However, high levels of individual variability in aggression obscure the role of chirps in mediating aggression. Here, I tested the presence of an aggression-boldness behavioural syndrome, and then considered the implications such a syndrome would have on chirping behaviours. Behavioural tests in anti-predation, object novelty, feeding, conspecific intrusion and novel environment exploration contexts revealed a syndrome involving only object novelty and feeding. We found no correlation between chirping behaviour and the assessed behaviours. Our results demonstrate that chirps represent a more complex communication system than previously suggested.
2

Behavioural Syndromes: Implications for Electrocommunication in a Weakly Electric Fish Species

Shank, Isabelle January 2013 (has links)
Behavioural syndromes, defined as suites of correlated behaviours across different contexts, are used to characterize individual variability in behaviours. Males of the weakly electric fish species, Apteronotus leptorhynchus, produce electro-communication signals called chirps. Chirps are thought to be involved in agonistic signalling, as their relative incidence increases during agonistic conspecific interactions. However, high levels of individual variability in aggression obscure the role of chirps in mediating aggression. Here, I tested the presence of an aggression-boldness behavioural syndrome, and then considered the implications such a syndrome would have on chirping behaviours. Behavioural tests in anti-predation, object novelty, feeding, conspecific intrusion and novel environment exploration contexts revealed a syndrome involving only object novelty and feeding. We found no correlation between chirping behaviour and the assessed behaviours. Our results demonstrate that chirps represent a more complex communication system than previously suggested.
3

Analyse de synchronisation dans les objets actifs basée sur les types comportementaux / Analysis of synchronisation patterns in active objects based on behavioural types

Mastandrea, Vicenzo 15 December 2017 (has links)
Le concept d'objet actif est un modèle de calcul puissant utilisé pour définir des systèmes distribués et concurrents. Dans ce travail, nous étudions un modèle d'objet actif sans type futur explicite et avec 'attente par nécessité', une technique qui déclenche une synchronisation sur la valeur retournée par une invocation lorsque celle-ci est strictement nécessaires. Bien que la concurrence élevée combinée à un haut niveau de transparence conduise à de bonnes performances, elles rendent le système plus propice à des problèmes comme les deadlocks. C'est la raison qui nous a conduit à étudier l'analyse de deadlocks dans ce modèle d'objets actifs. Le développement de notre analyse de les deadloks est divisé en deux travaux principaux. Dans le premier travail, nous nous concentrons sur la synchronisation implicite sur la disponibilité d'une certaine valeur. De cette façon, nous pouvons analyser la synchronisation des flux de données inhérente aux langues qui permettent une attente par nécessité. Dans le deuxième travail, nous présentons une technique d'analyse statique basée sur des effets et des types comportementaux pour dériver des modèles de synchronisation d'objets actifs et confirmant l'absence de deadlock dans ce contexte. Notre système d'effets trace l'accès aux champs d'objet, ce qui nous permet de calculer des types comportementaux qui expriment des modèles de synchronisation de manière précise. En conséquence, nous pouvons vérifier automatiquement l'absence de blocages dans des programmes basés sur des objets actifs avec des synchronisations d'attente par nécessité et des objets actifs dotés d’un état interne. / The active object concept is a powerful computational model for defining distributed and concurrent systems. This model has recently gained prominence, largely thanks to its simplicity and its abstraction level. In this work we study an active object model with no explicit future type and wait-by-necessity synchronisations, a lightweight technique that synchronises invocations when the corresponding values are strictly needed. Although high concurrency combined with a high level of transparency leads to good performances, they also make the system more prone to problems such as deadlocks. This is the reason that led us to study deadlock analysis in this active objects model.The development of our deadlock analysis is divided in two main works. In the first work we focus on the implicit synchronisation on the availability of some value. This way we are able to analyse the data-flow synchronisation inherent to languages that feature wait-by-necessity. In the second work we present a static analysis technique based on effects and behavioural types for deriving synchronisation patterns of stateful active objects and verifying the absence of deadlocks in this context. Our effect system traces the access to object fields, thus allowing us to compute behavioural types that express synchronisation patterns in a precise way. As a consequence we can automatically verify the absence of deadlocks in active object based programs with wait-by-necessity synchronisations and stateful active objects.
4

Diel and Life-History Characteristics of Personality: Consistency Versus Flexibility in Relation to Ecological Change

Watts, J. Colton, Ross, Chelsea R., Jones, Thomas C. 01 March 2015 (has links)
Despite the potential benefits of modifying behaviour according to changing ecological conditions, many populations comprise individuals that differ consistently in behaviour across situations, contexts and points in time (i.e. individuals show personality). If personalities are adaptive, the balance between consistency and flexibility of behavioural traits should reflect the ability of individuals to detect and respond to changing conditions in an appropriate and timely manner and, thus, depend upon the pace and predictability of changing conditions. We investigated the balance between individual consistency and flexibility in the subsocial spider Anelosimus studiosus by assaying boldness across the diel cycle and correlating these data with patterns of prey and threat abundance in the natural habitat. We found significant diel flexibility in boldness correlating with drastic and predictable changes in prey availability. Moreover, the strength of within-individual flexibility in boldness was comparable to the strength of rank-order consistency among individuals. We also found evidence that mean boldness level and among-individual variation in boldness are correlated with reproductive status. These data emphasize the interplay between behavioural consistency and flexibility and suggest that temporal characteristics of ecological conditions may be vital in assessing the strength, stability and adaptive value of animal personalities.
5

Linking individual behaviour and life history: bioenergetic mechanisms, eco-evolutionary outcomes and management implications / Vinculació del comportament individual amb la història de vida: mecanismes bioenergètics, implicacions eco-evolutives i de gestió

Campos-Candela, Andrea 08 January 2019 (has links)
Animal behaviour is a state variable of the individual that deserves special attention given its determinant role in eco-evolutionary processes (Wolf et al. 2007 in Nature). The decomposition of the behavioural variation in between- and within-individual variability has revealed the existence of consistent between-individual differences referred to as personality or behavioural types (Dall et al. 2004 in Ecology Letters). Five axes of personality are usually recognized (exploration, aggressiveness, activity, sociability and boldness), and individual specificities along them tend to be correlated leading to what is known as behavioural syndromes. Recently, these patterns of covariation have been enlarged to accommodate movement behaviour within a personality-dependent spatial ecology theory (Spiegel et al. 2017 in Ecology Letters). Most animals tend to forage, reproduce and develop any activity within specific bounded space, which leads to the formation of home range (HR) areas (i.e., HR behaviour, Börger et al. 2008 in Ecology Letters). The increasing development of animal tracking technology is providing a huge amount of movement data revealing that HR behaviour is widespread among taxa and shows a large consistent variability, both at within- and between-individual level, which allows to define the existence of well-contrasted spatial behavioural types (SBTs). SBTs, as other personality traits, play an important role in selective processes as those impelled by harvesting activities. The Pace-of-Life-Syndrome (POLS) theory (Réale et al. 2010 in Philos. Trans. R. Soc. B Biol. Sci), hypothesises on how personality traits are expected to be correlated with life history (LH) traits along the fast-slow continuum (Stearns 1992 in Oxford Univ. Press) in the broadest sense. Accordingly, patterns of covariation between specific SBTs, physiology-related features and LHs would be expected to exist whenever they maximize the animal performance in a given environment. However, the way in which behavioural variation at the within-species level is translated to the wide range of LH traits remains a fundamental yet unresolved question, mainly due to the lack of a proper theoretical framework (Mathot & Frankenhuis, March 2018 in Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology). Thus, unrevealing the mechanisms behind is certainly scientifically very exciting but also socially relevant. In such a context, this PhD thesis aimed to address from conceptual, empirical and theoretical perspectives cornerstone questions in behavioural ecology: what are the feasible mechanisms underpinning the establishment of HR areas and within-species variation, what are their consequences for animal functioning and performance (i.e., in. LH traits) at the individual and eco-evolutionary levels, or what are the implications for the assessment and conservation of wildlife of the existence of SBTs. The PhD thesis focusses in a fish heavily exploited by recreational fishers but it aims to provide general reasoning applicable to a wide range of wild animals. First, the PhD thesis proposes a mechanistic theory of personality-dependent movement behaviour based on dynamic energy budget models (i.e., a behavioural-bioenergetics theoretical model). Second, integrated in the field of animal personality (i.e., decomposition of behavioural variability into within- and between-individual’s components), it addresses empirically the study of behavioural variability in the main axis of personality for a marine fish species and looked for evidences of whether personality-mediated differences in energy acquisition may exist. Aiming to support empirically the possible connections between personality traits and space-use behaviour, the thesis provides some insights on the application of a novel-tracking algorithm to analyse the movement of individual fish submitted to different experimental conditions. Third, it provides two examples of how applying HR-related theoretical concepts may improve the management of natural resources: attending the properties of HR may facilitate the assessment of wildlife using fixed monitoring sampling stations, and considering SBTs may influence the assessment of the status of wild fish stocks. Finally, the adaptive value of the proposed behavioural-bioenergetics theory is explored by means of dynamic optimization to understand the eco-evolutionary consequences related with HR variability. In summary, this PhD thesis makes an important contribution to behavioural ecology by developing a unifying theory to test the generality and adaptive value of POLS based on dynamic energy budgets. This behavioural-bioenergetics model connects (1) personality traits (2) HR behaviour, (3) physiology and (4) LH traits through an interwoven of mass/energy fluxes, within which they interact and feedback with the ecological context. Overall, from an eco-evolutionary perspective, the proposed framework constitutes a powerful tool for exploring the ecological role of HR behaviour and predicting what combination of behavioural traits would be evolutionally favoured in a given ecological context. Moving forward to including managerial scenarios, this unifying theory provides scientifically founded knowledge that would promote to improve natural resource management by attending the behavioural component of animal populations.

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