Badyaev Alexander V, Hamstra Terri L, Oh Kevin P, Acevedo Seaman Dana A
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Sep 26;103(39):14406-11. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0602452103. Epub 2006 Sep 18.
Duration of developmental stages in animals evolves under contrasting selection pressures of age-specific mortality and growth requirements. When relative importance of these effects varies across environments, evolution of developmental periods is expected to be slow. In birds, maternal effects on egg-laying order and offspring growth, two proximate determinants of nestling period, should enable rapid adjustment of developmental periods to even widely fluctuating mortality rates. We test this hypothesis in a population of house finches (Carpodacus mexicanus) breeding under two contrasting mortality risks: (i) a nest mite-free condition when selection on offspring survival favors a longer time in the nest; and (ii) a mite infestation when selection favors a shorter nest tenure. Mites affected survival of sons more than daughters, and females breeding under mite infestation laid male eggs last and female eggs first in the clutch, thereby reducing sons' exposure to mites and associated mortality. Strong sex bias in laying order and growth patterns enabled mite-infested offspring to achieve similar fledging size, despite a shorter nest tenure, compared with mite-free conditions. In mite-infested nests, male nestlings hatched at larger sizes, completed growth earlier, and had faster initial growth compared with mite-free nests, whereas mite-infested females grew more slowly but for a longer period of time. A combination of heavily sex-biased laying order and sex differences in growth patterns lowered mite-induced mortality by >10% in both sexes. Thus, strong maternal effects can account for frequently observed, but theoretically unexpected, concordance of mortality risks and growth patterns, especially under fluctuating ecological conditions.
动物发育阶段的持续时间在特定年龄死亡率和生长需求的不同选择压力下进化。当这些影响的相对重要性在不同环境中变化时,发育时期的进化预计会很缓慢。在鸟类中,母体对产卵顺序和后代生长的影响是雏鸟期的两个直接决定因素,这应该能使发育时期迅速适应甚至广泛波动的死亡率。我们在一群家朱雀(Carpodacus mexicanus)中检验了这一假设,它们在两种不同的死亡风险下繁殖:(i)无巢螨条件,此时对后代存活的选择有利于在巢中停留更长时间;(ii)螨侵扰条件,此时选择有利于缩短巢期。螨对雄性后代存活的影响大于雌性,在螨侵扰下繁殖的雌性在一窝卵中最后产下雄性卵,最先产下雌性卵,从而减少雄性后代接触螨及相关死亡的机会。尽管巢期较短,但产卵顺序和生长模式中的强烈性别偏差使受螨侵扰的后代与无螨条件下的后代相比,能达到相似的出飞体型。在受螨侵扰的巢中,雄性雏鸟孵化时体型较大,生长完成得更早,与无螨巢相比初始生长速度更快,而受螨侵扰的雌性生长较慢但持续时间更长。产卵顺序的严重性别偏差和生长模式中的性别差异相结合,使两性因螨导致的死亡率降低了10%以上。因此,强烈的母体效应可以解释经常观察到但理论上意想不到的死亡率风险和生长模式的一致性,特别是在波动的生态条件下。