Filin Ido
Department of Evolutionary and Environmental Biology, University of Haifa, Mount Carmel, Haifa 31905, Israel.
J Theor Biol. 2015 Jan 7;364:168-78. doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2014.09.007. Epub 2014 Sep 16.
Variation in offspring size with female size and other aspects of the maternal phenotype is commonly observed and taxonomically widespread. However, life history theory predicts that optimal offspring size should not depend on maternal size or total reproductive effort. This incongruity persists despite various modifications to theory, that nonetheless, either are limited in their applicability or fail to alter the prediction of fixed offspring size. I demonstrate that the persistence of this theoretical outcome stems from an ideal assumption that reproductive effort relates only to direct material costs, and therefore, equal or proportional to clutch mass or the product of offspring size and number. A major innovation in my study is to explicitly distinguish between direct and overhead components of the costs of reproduction. When overhead energetic costs of reproduction are explicitly incorporated, I readily obtain variation in optimal offspring size with maternal phenotype. This consequence of overhead costs of reproduction has not been demonstrated before. I identify functional forms of such overhead costs that facilitate variation in optimal offspring size. In particular, costs that are more sensitive to offspring size than to offspring number are most effective in causing variation in offspring size. The novelty of the model lies in succeeding to resolve the above incongruity both within the framework of traditional models of optimal offspring size and within more dynamic description of the lifecycle (addressing simultaneously both offspring and maternal performance), including stochastic effects, difference between reserves and structural components of size, and distinction between starvation and extrinsic mortality. My predictions explain several patterns of variation in size and body composition of offspring, with respect to both environmental conditions and maternal phenotype.
后代大小随母体大小及母体表型其他方面的变化普遍存在且在分类学上广泛分布。然而,生活史理论预测最优后代大小不应取决于母体大小或总繁殖投入。尽管对该理论进行了各种修正,但这种不一致仍然存在,不过这些修正要么适用性有限,要么未能改变固定后代大小的预测。我证明这种理论结果的持续存在源于一个理想假设,即繁殖投入仅与直接物质成本相关,因此与窝卵质量或后代大小与数量的乘积相等或成比例。我研究中的一个主要创新是明确区分繁殖成本的直接部分和间接部分。当明确纳入繁殖的间接能量成本时,我很容易得到最优后代大小随母体表型的变化。繁殖间接成本的这种结果以前尚未得到证明。我确定了有助于最优后代大小变化的此类间接成本的函数形式。特别是,对后代大小比对后代数量更敏感的成本在导致后代大小变化方面最为有效。该模型的新颖之处在于成功地在最优后代大小的传统模型框架内以及在生命周期的更动态描述(同时考虑后代和母体表现)内解决了上述不一致,包括随机效应、大小的储备与结构成分之间的差异以及饥饿与外在死亡率之间的区别。我的预测解释了后代大小和身体组成在环境条件和母体表型方面的几种变化模式。