Exploring the ageing and survival costs of investment in anti-predation responses in a wild insect?
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Escape behaviour directly influences survival, yet individuals often vary substantially in escape performance. Laboratory studies have documented trade-offs between anti-predator responses and life-history traits, but it remains unclear whether such trade-offs occur under natural predation risk. We studied a natural population of the field cricket Gryllus campestris . Mortality risk and behavioural performance are known to change with age in this species. We aimed to determine whether individuals expressing a higher escape response pay a cost in terms of a faster increase in mortality risk with age or a shorter lifespan. We quantified escape speed in response to a vibrational predation cue. We found no clear evidence for a trade-off between escape performance and lifespan or age-specific mortality risk. The relationship between escape speed and the among-individual effect of age differed between sexes: older males showed faster escape speeds compared with younger males, whereas younger females were faster than older females. This pattern is consistent with sex-specific selective disappearance. Individual baseline mortality risk varied with sex and escape speed, but age-dependent mortality did not. It suggests that such trade-offs in the wild may be context- or condition-dependent rather than reflecting a universal life-history trade-off.