2019
DOI: 10.1007/s00265-019-2735-3
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Postnatal care generates phenotypic behavioural correlations in the Japanese quail

Abstract: Behavioural phenotypes can be highly constrained by interdependent behavioural traits. Studies in different taxa showed that these behavioural phenotypic correlations are not universal within a species and can differ between populations exposed to different environmental pressures. Empirical studies are required to better understand the relative contributions of longterm adaptive processes and direct ontogenetic mechanisms in the development of these phenotypic behavioural correlations. In the present study, w… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…For instance, prenatal stress generally stimulates and increases mammals' (Kaiser and Sachser, 2005) and birds' (Guibert et al, 2010) fear in the presence of stressful events. Parents can modulate chicks' behavioural A u t h o r ' s p r e -p r i n t traits through postnatal experience (Desmedt et al, 2020;Galuret et al, 2020;Pittet et al, 2019Pittet et al, , 2014c. Mothers can thus transmit part of their own behavioural characteristics by non-genetic pathways, like their feeding preferences (Wauters et al, 2002) or their social or emotional behaviour (Formanek et al, 2008;Richard-Yris et al, 2005).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, prenatal stress generally stimulates and increases mammals' (Kaiser and Sachser, 2005) and birds' (Guibert et al, 2010) fear in the presence of stressful events. Parents can modulate chicks' behavioural A u t h o r ' s p r e -p r i n t traits through postnatal experience (Desmedt et al, 2020;Galuret et al, 2020;Pittet et al, 2019Pittet et al, , 2014c. Mothers can thus transmit part of their own behavioural characteristics by non-genetic pathways, like their feeding preferences (Wauters et al, 2002) or their social or emotional behaviour (Formanek et al, 2008;Richard-Yris et al, 2005).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%