Integrating animal behaviour into research on multiple environmental
stressors: a conceptual framework
Abstract
While a large body of research has focused on the physiological effects
of multiple environmental stressors, behavioral effects remain far less
studied. However, behavioural plasticity can not only directly drive
responses to stressors but can also mediate physiological responses.
Here, we provide a conceptual framework incorporating four fundamental
tradeoffs explicitly linking animal behaviour to life history-based
pathways for energy allocation, shaping the impact of multiple stressors
on fitness. We first address how small-scale behavioural changes can
drive conflicts between the effects of multiple stressors and
alternative physiological responses. We then discuss how animal
behaviour gives rise to three additional understudied and interrelated
trade-offs: balancing the benefits and risks of obtaining the energy
needed to cope with stressors, allocation of energy between life-history
traits and stressor responses, and larger-scale escape from stressors in
space or time via dispersal or dormancy. Finally, we outline how these
trade-offs interactively affect fitness and qualitative ecological
outcomes resulting from multiple stressors. Our framework suggests that
animal behavior could underlie the extensive context dependence in
results from stressor research, highlighting promising avenues for
future empirical and theoretical research.