Goubault Marlène, Mack Alexandra F S, Hardy Ian C W
School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham, Sutton Bonington Campus, Loughborough, Leicestershire LE12 5RD, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2007 Oct 22;274(1625):2571-7. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2007.0867.
Understanding the size of clutches produced by only one parent may require a game-theoretic approach: clutch size may affect offspring fitness in terms of future competitive ability. If larger clutches generate smaller offspring and larger adults are more successful in acquiring and retaining resources, clutch size optima should be reduced when the probability of future competitive encounters is higher. We test this using Goniozus nephantidis, a gregarious parasitoid wasp in which the assumption of size-dependent resource acquisition is met via female-female contests for hosts. As predicted, smaller clutches are produced by mothers experiencing competition, due to fewer eggs being matured and to a reduced proportion of matured eggs being laid. As assumed, smaller clutches generate fewer but larger offspring. We believe this is the first direct evidence for pre-ovipositional and game-theoretic clutch size adjustment in response to an intergenerational fitness effect when clutches are produced by a single individual.
要理解仅由单亲产生的一窝卵的大小,可能需要一种博弈论方法:窝卵大小可能会根据未来的竞争能力影响后代的适应性。如果较大的窝卵产生较小的后代,且较大的成虫在获取和保留资源方面更成功,那么当未来竞争相遇的概率较高时,窝卵大小的最优值应该降低。我们使用尼氏食胚茧蜂来检验这一点,它是一种群居寄生蜂,通过雌蜂之间争夺寄主满足了与体型相关的资源获取假设。正如预测的那样,经历竞争的母亲产生的窝卵较小,这是因为成熟的卵较少,且产下的成熟卵比例降低。正如所假设的,较小的窝卵产生的后代数量较少但体型较大。我们认为,这是当窝卵由单个个体产生时,为响应代际适应性效应而进行产卵前和博弈论窝卵大小调整的首个直接证据。