Reilly Sarah J, Oum Robert, Heideman Paul D
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, 14853, USA.
Oecologia. 2006 Dec;150(3):373-82. doi: 10.1007/s00442-006-0533-x. Epub 2006 Sep 6.
Although most temperate-zone mammals are seasonal breeders, many populations display variation in winter reproductive phenotype. For most mammals, the primary environmental cues regulating reproductive status are food availability and photoperiod, and these two factors can interact in their effect. Low food availability is primarily thought to suppress reproduction by reducing body mass and thereby forcing energy allocations to survival alone. However, because most small mammals rely on an increase in food intake rather than stored nutrients for reproduction, we hypothesized that food availability could act as a signal for low resource availability and affect reproduction even when body condition was not affected. We tested the prediction that restricted food access, without reduced body mass, could alter reproductive responses to short photoperiod. We used genetically distinct lines of white-footed mice (Peromyscus leucopus) derived from a wild population with genetic variation in the neuroendocrine pathway that regulates reproduction in response to environmental cues. The lines were created by artificial selection on gonad size in short photoperiods. Individuals from one line strongly suppress gonadal development in response to short photoperiods, while individuals from the other line suppress gonadal development weakly or not at all. Unresponsive individuals from the selected and an unselected control line were exposed to an intermittent food access protocol that did not affect body mass and only slightly reduced total food intake. We found that restricting food access caused reproductive suppression in short photoperiods but not long photoperiods, with no decrease in body mass. These results provide evidence for an interaction between food and photoperiod that is not dependent upon body condition or energy balance. The results also demonstrate plasticity in the reproductive response to photoperiod of otherwise reproductively nonphotoperiodic white-footed mice.
尽管大多数温带地区的哺乳动物是季节性繁殖动物,但许多种群在冬季繁殖表型上存在差异。对于大多数哺乳动物来说,调节繁殖状态的主要环境线索是食物可获得性和光周期,这两个因素的影响可能相互作用。食物可获得性低主要被认为是通过降低体重来抑制繁殖,从而迫使能量仅用于生存。然而,由于大多数小型哺乳动物依靠增加食物摄入量而非储存的营养物质来进行繁殖,我们推测食物可获得性可能作为低资源可获得性的信号,即使身体状况未受影响也会影响繁殖。我们测试了以下预测:限制食物获取但不降低体重,可能会改变对短光周期的繁殖反应。我们使用了源自野生种群的基因不同品系的白足鼠(白足鼠属),这些品系在调节对环境线索作出反应的繁殖的神经内分泌途径中存在基因变异。这些品系是通过在短光周期下对性腺大小进行人工选择而创建的。一个品系的个体在短光周期下会强烈抑制性腺发育,而另一个品系的个体则微弱抑制或完全不抑制性腺发育。将选定品系和未选定对照品系中无反应的个体暴露于间歇性食物获取方案中,该方案不影响体重,仅略微减少总食物摄入量。我们发现,限制食物获取在短光周期而非长光周期下会导致繁殖抑制,且体重没有下降。这些结果为食物和光周期之间不依赖于身体状况或能量平衡的相互作用提供了证据。结果还证明了原本对光周期无繁殖反应的白足鼠在对光周期的繁殖反应中具有可塑性。