Speakman John R
Aberdeen Centre for Energy Regulation and Obesity (ACERO), School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2008 Jan 27;363(1490):375-98. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2007.2145.
Life-history trade-offs between components of fitness arise because reproduction entails both gains and costs. Costs of reproduction can be divided into ecological and physiological costs. The latter have been rarely studied yet are probably a dominant component of the effect. A deeper understanding of life-history evolution will only come about once these physiological costs are better understood. Physiological costs may be direct or indirect. Direct costs include the energy and nutrient demands of the reproductive event, and the morphological changes that are necessary to facilitate achieving these demands. Indirect costs may be optional 'compensatory costs' whereby the animal chooses to reduce investment in some other aspect of its physiology to maximize the input of resource to reproduction. Such costs may be distinguished from consequential costs that are an inescapable consequence of the reproductive event. In small mammals, the direct costs of reproduction involve increased energy, protein and calcium demands during pregnancy, but most particularly during lactation. Organ remodelling is necessary to achieve the high demands of lactation and involves growth of the alimentary tract and associated organs such as the liver and pancreas. Compensatory indirect costs include reductions in thermogenesis, immune function and physical activity. Obligatory consequential costs include hyperthermia, bone loss, disruption of sleep patterns and oxidative stress. This is unlikely to be a complete list. Our knowledge of these physiological costs is currently at best described as rudimentary. For some, we do not even know whether they are compensatory or obligatory. For almost all of them, we have no idea of exact mechanisms or how these costs translate into fitness trade-offs.
由于繁殖既有收益也有成本,因此在适合度的各个组成部分之间存在生活史权衡。繁殖成本可分为生态成本和生理成本。后者很少被研究,但可能是影响的主要组成部分。只有更好地理解这些生理成本,才能更深入地理解生活史进化。生理成本可能是直接的或间接的。直接成本包括繁殖事件对能量和营养的需求,以及为满足这些需求而必需的形态变化。间接成本可能是选择性的“补偿成本”,即动物选择减少在其生理其他方面的投入,以最大化对繁殖的资源投入。这种成本可能与繁殖事件不可避免的后果性成本区分开来。在小型哺乳动物中,繁殖的直接成本包括怀孕期,尤其是哺乳期对能量、蛋白质和钙需求的增加。为满足哺乳期的高需求,器官重塑是必要的,这涉及消化道以及肝脏和胰腺等相关器官的生长。补偿性间接成本包括产热、免疫功能和身体活动的减少。强制性后果性成本包括体温过高、骨质流失、睡眠模式紊乱和氧化应激。这可能不是一个完整的清单。我们目前对这些生理成本的了解充其量只能说是初步的。对于其中一些成本,我们甚至不知道它们是补偿性的还是强制性的。对于几乎所有这些成本,我们都不清楚确切的机制,也不知道这些成本如何转化为适合度权衡。