Bowers E Keith, Thompson Charles F, Sakaluk Scott K
Behavior, Ecology, Evolution and Systematics Section, School of Biological Sciences, Illinois State University, Normal, IL, 61790-4120, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2015 Mar;84(2):473-86. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12294. Epub 2014 Oct 20.
A major component of sex-allocation theory, the Trivers-Willard model (TWM), posits that sons and daughters are differentially affected by variation in the rearing environment. In many species, the amount of parental care received is expected to have differing effects on the fitness of males and females. When this occurs, the TWM predicts that selection should favour adjustment of the offspring sex ratio in relation to the expected fitness return from offspring. However, evidence for sex-by-environment effects is mixed, and little is known about the adaptive significance of producing either sex. Here, we test whether offspring sex ratios vary according to predictions of the TWM in the house wren (Troglodytes aedon, Vieillot). We also test the assumption of a sex-by-environment effect on offspring using two experiments, one in which we manipulated age differences among nestlings within broods, and another in which we held nestling age constant but manipulated brood size. As predicted, females with high investment ability overproduced sons relative to those with lower ability. Males were also overproduced early within breeding seasons. In our experiments, the body mass of sons was more strongly affected by the sibling-competitive environment and resource availability than that of daughters: males grew heavier than females when reared in good conditions but were lighter than females when in poor conditions. Parents rearing broods with 1:1 sex ratios were more productive than parents rearing broods biased more strongly towards sons or daughters, suggesting that selection favours the production of mixed-sex broods. However, differences in the condition of offspring as neonates persisted to adulthood, and their reproductive success as adults varied with the body mass of sons, but not daughters, prior to independence from parental care. Thus, selection should favour slight but predictable variations in the sex ratio in relation to the quality of offspring that parents are able to produce. Offspring sex interacts with the neonatal environment to influence offspring fitness, thus favouring sex-ratio adjustment by parents. However, increased sensitivity of males to environmental conditions, such as sibling rivalry and resource availability, reduces the fitness returns from highly male-biased broods.
性别分配理论的一个主要组成部分,即特里弗斯-威拉德模型(TWM),假定儿子和女儿受到育雏环境变化的影响不同。在许多物种中,预期所接受的亲代抚育数量对雄性和雌性的适合度会产生不同影响。当这种情况发生时,特里弗斯-威拉德模型预测,选择应有利于根据后代预期的适合度回报来调整后代的性别比例。然而,关于性别与环境相互作用影响的证据并不一致,而且对于生育任何一种性别的适应性意义知之甚少。在这里,我们测试家鹪鹩(Troglodytes aedon,维约)的后代性别比例是否根据特里弗斯-威拉德模型的预测而变化。我们还通过两个实验来测试后代性别受环境影响的假设,一个实验中我们操纵了一窝雏鸟之间的年龄差异,另一个实验中我们使雏鸟年龄保持不变但操纵了窝卵数。正如预测的那样,具有高投资能力的雌性相对于投资能力较低的雌性会过度生产雄性。在繁殖季节早期也会过度生产雄性。在我们的实验中,雄性的体重比雌性更容易受到同胞竞争环境和资源可用性的影响:在良好条件下饲养时雄性比雌性长得更重,但在恶劣条件下饲养时雄性比雌性轻。养育性别比例为1:1窝雏的亲代比养育性别比例更偏向雄性或雌性窝雏的亲代繁殖力更强,这表明选择有利于生产混合性别的窝雏。然而,新生后代的状况差异一直持续到成年,并且它们成年后的繁殖成功率随独立于亲代抚育之前雄性的体重而变化,但与雌性体重无关。因此,选择应该有利于根据亲代能够生产的后代质量在性别比例上产生轻微但可预测的变化。后代性别与新生环境相互作用以影响后代适合度,从而有利于亲代进行性别比例调整。然而,雄性对环境条件(如同胞竞争和资源可用性)的敏感性增加,会降低高度雄性偏倚窝雏的适合度回报。