Centre d'Etudes Biologiques de Chizé, CNRS, ULR, Villiers en Bois, France.
PLoS One. 2018 Mar 21;13(3):e0193526. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193526. eCollection 2018.
In wild vertebrates, young parents are less likely to successfully rear offspring relative to older ones because of lower parental skills ('the constraint hypothesis'), lower parental investment ('the restraint hypothesis') or because of a progressive disappearance of lower-quality individuals at young ages ('the selection hypothesis'). Because it is practically difficult to follow an offspring during its entire life, most studies have only focused on the ability of individuals to breed or produce young, while neglecting the ability of such young to subsequently survive and reproduce. Several proxies of individual quality can be useful to assess the ability of young to survive and recruit into the population. Among them, telomere length measurement appears especially promising because telomere length has been linked to longevity and fitness in captive and wild animals. By sampling 51 chicks reared by known-aged parents, we specifically tested whether parental age was correlated to offspring telomere length and body condition in a long-lived bird species, the Black-browed Albatross (Thalassarche melanophrys). Young Black-browed albatrosses produced chicks with shorter telomere relative to those raised by older ones. Short offspring telomeres could result from poor developmental conditions or heritability of telomere length. Moreover, young parents also had chicks of lower body condition when compared with older parents, although this effect was significant in female offspring only. Overall, our study demonstrates that parental age is correlated to two proxies of offspring fitness (body condition and telomere length), suggesting therefore that older individuals provide better parental cares to their offspring because of increased parental investment (restraint hypothesis), better foraging/parental skills (constraint hypothesis) or because only high-quality individuals reach older ages (selection hypothesis).
在野生脊椎动物中,年轻的父母相对于年老的父母,成功抚养后代的可能性较低,原因可能是较低的亲代技能(“约束假说”)、较低的亲代投资(“约束假说”),或者是因为低质量的个体在年轻时逐渐消失(“选择假说”)。由于实际操作上很难在整个生命周期中跟踪后代,因此大多数研究仅关注个体繁殖或生育后代的能力,而忽略了这些幼崽随后生存和繁殖的能力。个体质量的几个替代指标可用于评估幼崽的生存和补充到种群中的能力。其中,端粒长度测量特别有前途,因为端粒长度已与圈养和野生动物的寿命和适应性相关联。通过对 51 只由已知年龄的亲鸟抚养的雏鸟进行采样,我们特别测试了在一种长寿鸟类(黑眉信天翁)中,亲鸟年龄是否与后代的端粒长度和身体状况相关。与由年老亲鸟抚养的雏鸟相比,年轻的黑眉信天翁产生的雏鸟的端粒较短。幼鸟端粒较短可能是由于发育条件较差或端粒长度的遗传性。此外,与年老的亲鸟相比,年轻的亲鸟的雏鸟的身体状况也较差,尽管这种影响仅在雌性后代中显著。总体而言,我们的研究表明,亲鸟年龄与后代适应性的两个替代指标(身体状况和端粒长度)相关,这表明由于增加了亲代投资(约束假说)、更好的觅食/亲代技能(约束假说),或者只有高质量的个体才能达到老年(选择假说),年老的个体能为其后代提供更好的亲代关怀。