Suppr超能文献

自由放养花栗鼠生长的能量和生存成本。

The energetic and survival costs of growth in free-ranging chipmunks.

机构信息

Département de Biologie, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, QC, Canada.

出版信息

Oecologia. 2013 Jan;171(1):11-23. doi: 10.1007/s00442-012-2385-x. Epub 2012 Jun 13.

Abstract

The growth/survival trade-off is a fundamental aspect of life-history evolution that is often explained by the direct energetic requirement for growth that cannot be allocated into maintenance. However, there is currently no empirical consensus on whether fast-growing individuals have higher resting metabolic rates at thermoneutrality (RMRt) than slow growers. Moreover, the link between growth rate and daily energy expenditure (DEE) has never been tested in a wild endotherm. We assessed the energetic and survival costs of growth in juvenile eastern chipmunks (Tamias striatus) during a year of low food abundance by quantifying post-emergent growth rate (n = 88), RMRt (n = 66), DEE (n = 20), and overwinter survival. Both RMRt and DEE were significantly and positively related to growth rate. The effect size was stronger for DEE than RMRt, suggesting that the energy cost of growth in wild animals is more likely to be related to the maintenance of a higher foraging rate (included in DEE) than to tissue accretion (included in RMRt). Fast growers were significantly less likely to survive the following winter compared to slow growers. Juveniles with high or low RMRt were less likely to survive winter than juveniles with intermediate RMRt. In contrast, DEE was unrelated to survival. In addition, botfly parasitism simultaneously decreased growth rate and survival, suggesting that the energetic budget of juveniles was restricted by the simultaneous costs of growth and parasitism. Although the biology of the species (seed-storing hibernator) and the context of our study (constraining environmental conditions) were ideally combined to reveal a direct relationship between current use of energy and future availability, it remains unclear whether the energetic cost of growth was directly responsible for reduced survival.

摘要

生长/存活权衡是生活史进化的一个基本方面,通常可以用生长的直接能量需求来解释,这些能量不能分配到维持生命上。然而,目前还没有关于快速生长的个体在热中性(RMRt)时是否比生长缓慢的个体具有更高的静息代谢率(RMRt)的共识。此外,在野生恒温动物中,生长率与每日能量支出(DEE)之间的联系从未被测试过。我们通过量化出芽后生长率(n=88)、RMRt(n=66)、DEE(n=20)和越冬存活率,来评估低食物丰度条件下幼年东部花栗鼠(Tamias striatus)在一年内生长的能量和生存成本。RMRt 和 DEE 与生长率均呈显著正相关。DEE 的效应大小强于 RMRt,这表明野生动物的生长能量成本更有可能与维持更高的觅食率(包括在 DEE 中)有关,而不是与组织积累(包括在 RMRt 中)有关。与生长缓慢的个体相比,快速生长的个体在下一个冬天存活的可能性显著降低。RMRt 较高或较低的幼仔比 RMRt 中等的幼仔更不可能在冬天存活。相反,DEE 与存活率无关。此外,狂蝇幼虫寄生同时降低了生长率和存活率,这表明幼仔的能量预算受到生长和寄生虫寄生同时产生的成本的限制。尽管该物种的生物学(储存种子的冬眠者)和我们研究的背景(限制环境条件)理想地结合在一起,揭示了当前能量利用与未来可用性之间的直接关系,但仍不清楚生长的能量成本是否直接导致存活率降低。

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验