Centre for Ecology and Conservation, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus, Penryn TR10 9EZ, UK.
Science. 2014 Aug 15;345(6198):776-81. doi: 10.1126/science.1253294. Epub 2014 Aug 14.
Parenting behaviors, such as the provisioning of food by parents to offspring, are known to be highly responsive to changes in environment. However, we currently know little about how such flexibility affects the ways in which parenting is adapted and evolves in response to environmental variation. This is because few studies quantify how individuals vary in their response to changing environments, especially social environments created by other individuals with which parents interact. Social environmental factors differ from nonsocial factors, such as food availability, because parents and offspring both contribute and respond to the social environment they experience. This interdependence leads to the coevolution of flexible behaviors involved in parenting, which could, paradoxically, constrain the ability of individuals to rapidly adapt to changes in their nonsocial environment.
父母养育行为,例如父母为后代提供食物,众所周知,对环境变化高度敏感。然而,我们目前对于这种灵活性如何影响父母养育行为适应和进化以应对环境变化知之甚少。这是因为很少有研究量化个体对不断变化的环境的反应差异,尤其是由与父母互动的其他个体创造的社会环境。社会环境因素与非社会因素(例如食物供应)不同,因为父母和后代都对他们所经历的社会环境做出贡献并做出反应。这种相互依存关系导致了参与养育的灵活行为的共同进化,这可能会反过来限制个体快速适应非社会环境变化的能力。