Kim Sin-Yeon, Metcalfe Neil B, da Silva Alberto, Velando Alberto
Departamento de Ecoloxía e Bioloxía Animal, Universidade de Vigo, 36310, Vigo, Spain.
Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, G12 8QQ, UK.
BMC Ecol. 2017 Nov 10;17(1):34. doi: 10.1186/s12898-017-0144-x.
Conditions experienced by a female during early life may affect her reproductive strategies and maternal investment later in life. This effect of early environmental conditions is a potentially important mechanism by which animals can compensate for the negative impacts of climate change. In this study, we experimentally tested whether three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus) change their maternal strategy according to environmental temperatures experienced earlier in life. We studied maternal investment from a life-history perspective because females are expected to adjust their reproductive strategy in relation to their current and future reproductive returns as well as offspring fitness.
F1 families were reared in control and elevated winter temperatures and their reproductive trajectories were studied when returned to common conditions. Females that had experienced the warm winter treatment (n = 141) had a lower fecundity and reduced breeding and total lifespan compared to the control individuals (n = 159). Whereas the control females tended to produce their heaviest and largest clutches in their first reproductive attempt, the warm-acclimated females invested less in their first clutch, but then produced increasingly heavy clutches over the course of the breeding season. Egg mass increased with clutch number at a similar rate in the two groups. The warm-acclimated females increased the investment of carotenoids in the first and last clutches of the season. Thus, any transgenerational effects of the maternal thermal environment on offspring phenotype may be mediated by the allocation of antioxidants into eggs but not by egg size.
Our results indicate that conditions experienced by females during juvenile life have a profound effect on life-time maternal reproductive strategies. The temperature-induced changes in maternal strategy may be due to constraints imposed by the higher energetic costs of a warm environment, but it is possible that they allow the offspring to compensate for higher energetic costs and damage when they face the same thermal stress as did their mothers.
雌性动物在生命早期所经历的环境条件可能会影响其后期的繁殖策略和母性投入。早期环境条件的这种影响是动物补偿气候变化负面影响的一种潜在重要机制。在本研究中,我们通过实验测试了三刺鱼(Gasterosteus aculeatus)是否会根据生命早期所经历的环境温度改变其母性策略。我们从生活史的角度研究母性投入,因为预计雌性会根据其当前和未来的繁殖回报以及后代的适合度来调整其繁殖策略。
F1代鱼在对照和冬季温度升高的条件下饲养,当回到共同条件下时研究它们的繁殖轨迹。与对照个体(n = 159)相比,经历过暖冬处理的雌性(n = 141)繁殖力较低,繁殖和总寿命缩短。对照雌性倾向于在首次繁殖尝试时产出最重、最大的一窝卵,而适应温暖环境的雌性在第一窝卵上投入较少,但在繁殖季节后期产出的卵窝越来越重。两组中卵的质量随卵窝数量增加的速率相似。适应温暖环境的雌性在该季节的第一窝和最后一窝卵中增加了类胡萝卜素的投入。因此,母性热环境对后代表型的任何跨代效应可能是由抗氧化剂在卵中的分配介导的,而不是由卵的大小介导的。
我们的结果表明,雌性在幼年期所经历的条件对其一生的母性繁殖策略有深远影响。温度诱导的母性策略变化可能是由于温暖环境中较高的能量成本所带来的限制,但也有可能是它们使后代在面临与母亲相同的热应激时能够补偿更高的能量成本和损伤。