Oksanen Tuula A, Koivula Minna, Koskela Esa, Mappes Tapio
Department of Biological and Environmental Science, P.O. Box 35, FI-40014, University of Jyväskylä, Finland.
Evolution. 2007 Dec;61(12):2822-31. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2007.00245.x. Epub 2007 Oct 9.
Body size at birth has implications for the quality of individuals throughout their life. Although large body size is generally considered an advantage, the relationship between body size at birth and long-term fitness is often complicated. Under spatial or temporal variation in environmental conditions, such as the seasonally changing densities of Fennoscandian vole populations, selection should favor variation in offspring phenotypes, as different qualities may be beneficial in different conditions. We performed an experiment in which a novel hormonal manipulation method was used to increase phenotypic variance in body size at birth in the bank vole (Myodes glareolus). The effects of body size on the future fitness of young males and females were then studied at varying population densities in outdoor enclosures. Our results show that small body size at birth and high breeding density increase the survival costs of reproduction. However, there was no interaction between the effects of body size and density on survival, which suggests that the fitness effects of body size were strong enough to persist under environmental variation. Moreover, litter size and the probability of breeding were more sensitive to variation in breeding density than offspring size. Therefore, it is unlikely that individual fitness could be optimized by adjusting offspring body size to the prevailing population density through adaptive maternal effects. Our results highlight the significance of the costs of reproduction in the evolution of life-history traits, and give strong experimental support for the long-term fitness effects of body size at birth.
出生时的体型对个体一生的质量都有影响。尽管大体型通常被认为是一种优势,但出生时的体型与长期健康状况之间的关系往往很复杂。在环境条件的空间或时间变化下,比如芬兰斯堪的纳维亚田鼠种群密度随季节变化,选择应有利于后代表型的变异,因为不同的特质在不同条件下可能是有益的。我们进行了一项实验,采用一种新的激素操纵方法来增加长尾田鼠(Myodes glareolus)出生时体型的表型变异。然后在户外围栏中不同种群密度下研究了体型对年轻雄性和雌性未来健康状况的影响。我们的结果表明,出生时体型小和繁殖密度高会增加繁殖的生存成本。然而,体型和密度对生存的影响之间没有相互作用,这表明体型对健康状况的影响足够强大,能够在环境变化下持续存在。此外,窝仔数和繁殖概率对繁殖密度变化的敏感度高于后代体型。因此,不太可能通过适应性母体效应根据当前种群密度调整后代体型来优化个体健康状况。我们的结果突出了繁殖成本在生活史特征进化中的重要性,并为出生时体型对长期健康状况的影响提供了有力的实验支持。