Meylan Sandrine, Clobert Jean
Laboratoire d'Ecologie, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique-Unité Mixte de Recherche 7625, Université de Paris VI, Case 237, 7 quai Saint Bernard 75252 Paris, France.
Physiol Biochem Zool. 2004 May-Jun;77(3):450-8. doi: 10.1086/383508.
Offspring phenotype can be affected by maternal history before and during gestation. Offspring sensitivity to maternal conditions is believed to have evolved to favor preadaptation of offspring to environmental factors they are likely to encounter. Because the locomotor capacity of an individual is likely to have important fitness consequences, we examined the role of long-term and short-term prenatal conditions on offspring's locomotor performance in the lizard Lacerta vivipara. To examine long-term prenatal effects, we manipulated the density of two populations, leaving two additional populations as unmanipulated. We then collected pregnant females within these four populations (Cévennes, Massif Central, France) and kept them in the laboratory until parturition. To examine short-term prenatal effects, we manipulated the corticosterone level of half the females within each population. We took two different measurements of offspring locomotion: sprint speed and endurance. As already documented, sprint speed was positively correlated with offspring body size. Although population density significantly affected female fecundity, neither the density manipulation nor the population of origin influenced offspring phenotype. Corticosterone administered during gestation decreased juvenile sprint speed but did not affect juvenile endurance. Furthermore, we observed that the motivation to run was influenced by maternal hormonal treatment. Juveniles born from corticosterone-treated mothers needed more stimuli than those born from control mothers. We conclude, therefore, that the action of corticosterone on sprint speed could be more behavioral than physiological. Offspring phenotype as measured by endurance and sprint speed appeared partly under maternal control.
后代的表型会受到母体在妊娠前和妊娠期间经历的影响。后代对母体状况的敏感性被认为是进化而来的,有利于后代对其可能遇到的环境因素进行预适应。由于个体的运动能力可能会对适应性产生重要影响,我们研究了长期和短期产前条件对胎生蜥蜴绿蜥蜴后代运动表现的作用。为了研究长期产前影响,我们对两个种群的密度进行了控制,另外两个种群作为未处理的对照。然后我们在这四个种群(法国中央高原塞文山脉)中收集怀孕的雌性蜥蜴,并将它们饲养在实验室直到分娩。为了研究短期产前影响,我们对每个种群中一半的雌性蜥蜴的皮质酮水平进行了控制。我们对后代的运动进行了两种不同的测量:短跑速度和耐力。正如已经记录的那样,短跑速度与后代体型呈正相关。尽管种群密度显著影响雌性的繁殖力,但密度控制和种群来源都没有影响后代的表型。妊娠期给予皮质酮会降低幼体的短跑速度,但不影响幼体的耐力。此外,我们观察到奔跑的动机受到母体激素处理的影响。由接受皮质酮处理的母亲所生的幼体比由对照母亲所生的幼体需要更多的刺激。因此,我们得出结论,皮质酮对短跑速度的作用可能更多是行为上的而非生理上的。通过耐力和短跑速度衡量的后代表型部分受母体控制。