Beckerman Andrew P, Benton Tim G, Lapsley Craig T, Koesters Nils
School of Biological and Environmental Science, University of Stirling, Stirling FK9 4LA, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2006 Feb 22;273(1585):485-93. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2005.3315.
The well studied trade-off between offspring size and offspring number assumes that offspring fitness increases with increasing per-offspring investment. Where mothers differ genetically or exhibit plastic variation in reproductive effort, there can be variation in per capita investment in offspring, and via this trade-off, variation in fecundity. Variation in per capita investment will affect juvenile performance directly--a classical maternal effect--while variation in fecundity will also affect offspring performance by altering the offsprings' competitive environment. The importance of this trade-off, while a focus of evolutionary research, is not often considered in discussions about population dynamics. Here, we use a factorial experiment to determine what proportion of variation in offspring performance can be ascribed to maternal effects and what proportion to the competitive environment linked to the size-number trade-off. Our results suggest that classical maternal effects are significant, but that in our system, the competitive environment, which is linked to maternal environments by fecundity, can be a far more substantial influence.
在后代大小和后代数量之间经过充分研究的权衡假设,即后代适合度随着每个后代投资的增加而提高。当母亲在基因上存在差异或在繁殖努力上表现出可塑性变化时,每个后代的人均投资可能会有所不同,并且通过这种权衡,繁殖力也会有所不同。人均投资的变化将直接影响幼体的表现——这是一种经典的母体效应——而繁殖力的变化也会通过改变后代的竞争环境来影响后代的表现。这种权衡的重要性虽然是进化研究的一个重点,但在关于种群动态的讨论中却不常被考虑。在这里,我们使用析因实验来确定后代表现的变异中,有多大比例可归因于母体效应,以及有多大比例可归因于与大小-数量权衡相关的竞争环境。我们的结果表明,经典的母体效应是显著的,但在我们的系统中,与繁殖力相关联的竞争环境可能是一个更具实质性的影响因素。