Brown Gregory P, Shine Richard
School of Biological Sciences A08, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2009 Apr 27;364(1520):1097-106. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2008.0247.
Traditionally, research on life-history traits has viewed the link between clutch size and offspring size as a straightforward linear trade-off; the product of these two components is taken as a measure of maternal reproductive output. Investing more per egg results in fewer but larger eggs and, hence, offspring. This simple size-number trade-off has proved attractive to modellers, but our experimental studies on keelback snakes (Tropidonophis mairii, Colubridae) reveal a more complex relationship between clutch size and offspring size. At constant water availability, the amount of water taken up by a snake egg depends upon the number of adjacent eggs. In turn, water uptake affects hatchling size, and therefore an increase in clutch size directly increases offspring size (and thus fitness under field conditions). This allometric advantage may influence the evolution of reproductive traits such as growth versus reproductive effort, optimal age at female maturation, the body-reserve threshold required to initiate reproduction and nest-site selection (e.g. communal oviposition). The published literature suggests that similar kinds of complex effects of clutch size on offspring viability are widespread in both vertebrates and invertebrates. Our results also challenge conventional experimental methodologies such as split-clutch designs for laboratory incubation studies: by separating an egg from its siblings, we may directly affect offspring size and thus viability.
传统上,对生活史特征的研究将窝卵数与后代大小之间的联系视为一种简单的线性权衡;这两个组成部分的乘积被用作衡量母体繁殖输出的指标。每个卵投入更多资源会导致卵的数量减少但个头更大,从而后代数量减少但个头更大。这种简单的大小-数量权衡对建模者很有吸引力,但我们对红脖颈槽蛇(Tropidonophis mairii,游蛇科)的实验研究揭示了窝卵数与后代大小之间更复杂的关系。在水分供应恒定的情况下,蛇卵吸收的水量取决于相邻卵 的数量。反过来,水分吸收会影响幼体大小,因此窝卵数的增加会直接增加后代大小(从而提高野外条件下的适合度)。这种异速生长优势可能会影响繁殖特征的进化,如生长与繁殖投入、雌性成熟的最佳年龄、开始繁殖所需的身体储备阈值以及筑巢地点选择(如共栖产卵)。已发表的文献表明,窝卵数对后代生存能力的类似复杂影响在脊椎动物和无脊椎动物中都很普遍。我们的结果还对传统实验方法提出了挑战,如用于实验室孵化研究的分窝设计:通过将一个卵与其兄弟姐妹分开,我们可能会直接影响后代大小,进而影响其生存能力。