Plard Floriane, Arlettaz Raphaël, Schaub Michael
Swiss Ornithological Institute, CH-6204, Sempach, Switzerland.
Division of Conservation Biology, Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Bern, Baltzerstrasse 6a, 3012, Bern, Switzerland.
Oecologia. 2018 Mar;186(3):665-675. doi: 10.1007/s00442-017-4028-8. Epub 2017 Dec 16.
Reproductive and survival costs due to reproductive investment are a central element for the evolution of life histories. Both intra- (reduction of reproductive performance of second brood due to investment in first brood) and inter-seasonal costs (reduction of reproductive performance or annual survival due to reproductive investment in preceding year) may appear in multiple breeding species. Knowledge about how trade-offs within and between seasons shape individual trajectories and influence fitness are crucial in life-history evolution, yet intra- and inter-seasonal reproductive costs are rarely analysed simultaneously. We investigated sex-specific differences in intra- and inter-seasonal reproductive and survival costs in response to previous reproductive effort in a monogamous, double-brooding bird, the hoopoe (Upupa epops), accounting for heterogeneity in individual and annual quality. Intra-seasonal reproductive costs were detected in males and inter-seasonal reproductive and survival costs were detected in females. In males, the probability of being a successful double breeder was negatively correlated with the number of hatchlings produced in the first brood. In females, the number of fledglings raised in the first brood was negatively correlated with the reproductive effort in the preceding season. Female annual survival was also negatively influenced by the number of broods produced in the previous reproductive season. Most of these reproductive costs were detected only in years with low productivity, suggesting that costs become evident when environmental conditions are harsh. Our results illustrate how different investment in current vs. future reproduction and survival shape different life-history strategies in males and females of a monogamous bird species.
由于生殖投资导致的生殖和生存成本是生活史进化的核心要素。在多窝繁殖物种中可能会出现窝内成本(由于对第一窝的投资而导致第二窝生殖性能下降)和季节间成本(由于上一年的生殖投资而导致生殖性能下降或年生存率降低)。了解季节内和季节间的权衡如何塑造个体轨迹并影响适合度在生活史进化中至关重要,然而,很少同时分析窝内和季节间的生殖成本。我们研究了在一夫一妻制、双窝繁殖的戴胜鸟(Upupa epops)中,窝内和季节间生殖及生存成本的性别差异,以应对之前的生殖努力,并考虑了个体和年度质量的异质性。在雄性中检测到了窝内生殖成本,在雌性中检测到了季节间生殖和生存成本。在雄性中,成功进行双窝繁殖的概率与第一窝孵化的幼鸟数量呈负相关。在雌性中,第一窝养育的雏鸟数量与上一季节的生殖努力呈负相关。雌性的年生存率也受到上一繁殖季节产窝数的负面影响。这些生殖成本大多仅在生产力较低的年份被检测到,这表明当环境条件恶劣时成本才会显现出来。我们的结果说明了当前与未来生殖和生存的不同投资如何塑造了一夫一妻制鸟类物种中雄性和雌性不同的生活史策略。