I took a career test in high school
that was supposed to tell me my ideal career based on my personality. I’m not
sure which boxes I checked, but my results indicated that I should either be a “box-packer”
or a taxi driver. While I hope that I will have a career that relates more
closely to what I have studied in college, I can see why my personality might
suit me for those roles. It’s easy to imagine that somebody’s personality could
be a good indicator of the kinds of jobs they might be good at: a very patient
person will be a better teacher, a detail-oriented person will be a good copy
editor, and a charismatic person will do well in sales. There are tons of services
and quizzes
online that will even help you to do that!
A vital part of human society and
civilization is the division of labor; we all do different things, and contribute
differently to society. What we do is, at least in part, determined by who we
are as people and what we’re like.
While the
animal world may be lacking in patient teachers, meticulous copy editors, and
gregarious salespeople, some of the same types of divisions occur. The
Merriam-Webster English Dictionary defines personality (for people) as:
the set of emotional qualities, ways of behaving, etc., that makes a person different from other people
In animal behavior, on the other hand, personality
is slightly more broadly described (as discussed by Gosling in 2001). Essentially, in both
the human and the animal world, personalities make individuals stick out as
different from others, when they may be outwardly similar. Animals in many taxa
have personalities, and it has been found that animal populations in which
there are varied personalities do better than populations with all the same
personality. For example, rock ants have been shown to have more productive colonies when there are
members with different levels of aggression (Modlmeier, 2011). Why do personalities exist at all? Why don’t animal populations just evolve the “best personality” and
get rid of inferior ones? Studying these questions, and understanding how different personalities benefit populations and individuals, brings up many interesting avenues
of research.
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| [1] Spiders are just like us! |
Many of us
might not get past adjectives like “terrifying” or “gross” when describing
spiders – but if we look past the fear-factor, these arthropods are complex,
fascinating, and even have personalities! Spider personalities are probably somewhat
more limited than human personalities (at least in the current understanding),
but they still provide the basis for research on animal personality.
In the tangle web spider species Anelosimus studiosus, female spiders are
described as either docile or aggressive. How do we know which is which? Well,
the aggressive ones wouldn’t be much fun at a party- to identify the aggressive
females, they measured how far away other spiders sat when they were forced
into a small space together (since aggressive females scare off everyone else).
We also know that colonies with both personality types do better than all
aggressive or all docile groups (this goes for not just spiders, but all sorts
of animals). This big news in itself, and it begs the question – why do both of these personality types
stick around?
![]() |
| [2] A lone Anelosimus studiosus hanging out in her web |
Researchers in Georgia and
Pittsburgh wanted to look even further into the personality differences in the
spider. Do mixed-personality colonies do better simply because docile spiders
ease the tension between their aggressive friends? Or do the different
personality types provide other unique benefits to the colony? This species is sometimes
solitary, but is often found in colonies of around 5 individuals. So we’ve got
a little spider village, and in the village someone has to provide the food,
someone has to take care of the babies, someone has to repair and build the
home, and someone has to defend. How do the various personalities present in
the colony affect who does what?
The
researchers established colonies of all-docile, all-aggressive, and mixed personality
spiders, and then watched them to see what they do. They kept track of who took
care of the brood, they damaged the web and watched who fixed it, they placed
threatening species nearby and watched who reacted aggressively to it, and to
see who fulfilled the prey-capturing role, they vibrated a piece of cloth (With
a vibrator. Yes, that kind of
vibrator) and watched who came to check out the new potential food source.
It turns out that when the colonies
have aggressive and docile members, the docile ones do more brood care, and the
aggressive ones are more likely to spend their time trying to capture prey, fix
the web, or defend the colony. In fact, aggressive individuals will spend the
same amount of time doing these tasks whether or not there are docile members in
the colony. Docile spiders, though, will spend their time differently depending
on if there are aggressive colony mates; they spend more of their time caring
for the brood if they have aggressive colony-mates which will spend more time
doing the other tasks no matter what. The degree to which each job is
accomplished in the colony, therefore, depends on the types of personalities of
the members. An all-aggressive colony will have less cared-for young than an
all-docile group, while an all-docile colony will have less response to prey
than a mixed group or an all-aggressive group. The mixed groups will be better off over all than both types of single-personality groups.
Let’s take this back to
people. Some people like to be builders, hunters, and defenders. They will keep
building, hunting, and defending the same amount, even if that means no one is
taking care of the children. Then there are some people who are more flexible;
if nobody else is building, hunting, and defending, they will let childcare
fall by the wayside a bit to get those jobs done. But if other people take
those jobs, they will focus much more time on childcare than anything else.
Sounds like the flexible people (or the docile spiders) would be pretty helpful
to have around in a mixed group, though when they’re on their own, they simply
don’t do as much defending, hunting, or repairing. The docile and aggressive
people will both benefit from having the others around, since they can each focus
more on the jobs they are best at.
Well, why does this
matter? This study unites the research done on animal personalities and on how
animals work together in groups, and shows us an important way that division of
labor could impact why different personalities appear. Humans in groups work a lot like this too, in
that project teams or other collaborative groups are most successful when the
members have a variety of ways of thinking. This could relate to the different
personalities of the members (not everyone can be a leader or a follower for
example), or to differences in past experience, skills, or personal qualities.
Businesses and institutions have figured out what spiders knew already…. Project
teams will get work done best when members of the team bring different
personalities and skills to the table.
[4] These musical high schoolers
figured out something that our the tangle web spiders have known for a long
time…
“Everyone is special in their own way
We make each other strong (we make each other strong)
We’re not the same
We’re different in a good way
Together's where we belong”
We make each other strong (we make each other strong)
We’re not the same
We’re different in a good way
Together's where we belong”
Research Article:
Holbrook, C. Tate, Colin M. Wright, and Jonathan N. Pruitt. “Individual Differences in Personality and Behavioural Plasticity Facilitate Division of Labour in Social Spider Colonies.” Animal Behaviour 97 (November 2014): 177–83. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2014.09.015.Modlmeier, A. P., & Foitzik, S. (2011). Productivity increases with variation in aggression among group members in Temnothorax ants. Behavioral Ecology, 22, 1026e1032.
doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2014.09.015 URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347214003510
Other citations:
Gosling, Samuel D. “From Mice to Men: What Can We Learn about Personality from Animal Research?” Psychological Bulletin 127, no. 1 (January 2001): 45–86. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.127.1.45.
Modlmeier, Andreas P., and Susanne Foitzik. “Productivity Increases with Variation in Aggression among Group Members in Temnothorax Ants.” Behavioral Ecology, June 28, 2011, arr086. doi:10.1093/beheco/arr086.
Media credits:
“Personality.” Merriam-Webster, n.d.
[1] Photo by Dave Stokes: https://www.flickr.com/photos/33909700@N02/11135438155/in/photolist-2YNZjk-gNwiuj-4iXGB7-4iTECH-8yuraC-hY12P2-pocTUz-9YZA9u-dMRton-8wJCfa-8gFPq1-c8wuVq-dii6te-565GVc-oFqWFz-adPDnR-fsyyoF-bMny8t-a5yXUo-4fus8W
[2] Photo by Sarah Zukoff: https://www.flickr.com/photos/entogirl/7047046787/.
[3] Figure from Holbrook, C. Tate, Colin M. Wright, and Jonathan N. Pruitt. “Individual Differences in Personality and Behavioural Plasticity Facilitate Division of Labour in Social Spider Colonies.” Animal Behaviour 97 (November 2014): 177–83. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2014.09.015.
[4] Video by Disneymusic: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BlRvE9dKWQc.



What do the male spiders do?
ReplyDeleteI didn't like and was unsettled by how the roles of the "aggressive" and "docile" spiders seemed to align exactly with the husband/wife roles of the white, 1950's, suburban, stereotypical marriage. I didn't like how this "translated" to human behavior, because that duality is something that I think should be moved past.
Also, I disagree that personality determines what jobs you should be good at. People get good at the things they practice, and people practice the things they're interested in. People can even change their personality with effort.
I do think that teams should have people with different strengths and from diverse backgrounds and with different personalities, but I don't know if we needed spiders to tell us that.
I wonder if there are extreme situations in which the spiders would change their behavior. Is their behavior flexible?
ReplyDeleteSo it seems that individual actions are independent of the group makeup, but does the group makeup depend on the personalities of the individuals? Perhaps if there are 4 aggressive spiders, the 5th recruitment would tend toward a more docile individual. It would be interesting to see whether replacement of individuals tended toward the 'missing' roles.
ReplyDelete