Department of Zoology, University of Delhi, Delhi 110 007, India.
Department of Zoology, University of Delhi, Delhi 110 007, India
J Exp Biol. 2019 Apr 3;222(Pt 7):jeb196667. doi: 10.1242/jeb.196667.
An abundant food supply is crucial to reproductive performance, as shown by restricted food availability experiments, in small-sized vertebrates including birds. However, whether daily feeding times affect reproduction is largely unknown. The present study investigated the effects of daily food availability times on reproductive performance and quality of eggs and offspring survivors in zebra finches (). In randomly paired birds kept under a 12 h:12 h light:dark cycle for about 52 weeks, food availability period was restricted to 4 h in the morning [morning food availability (FA) group] or evening (evening FA group), with controls provided with food ; thus, the daily food deprivation period began after 4 h of food availability in the morning food access group and was continuous with night-time starvation in the evening food access group. Both food restrictions adversely affected reproductive health, as shown by reduced sex steroid and mesotocin levels, but not general metabolism, as indicated by the absence of a difference in thyroxin and triiodothyronine levels. Restricting food access to a 4 h period negatively affected reproductive performance, although there were differences between pairs in the morning and evening FA groups. In particular, there was delayed onset of reproduction and compromised reproductive success in evening FA but not in morning FA pairs; conversely, offspring health was severely compromised in morning FA but not in evening FA group pairs. Furthermore, morning FA group females were in better health, implying a sex bias in parental food provisioning. Overall, we demonstrate trade-off of 'quantity' (number of offspring produced and/or survived) for 'quality' (how healthy offspring were) in response to daily food availability times in zebra finches, which, much like humans, are diurnal and retain the ability to reproduce throughout the year.
充足的食物供应对繁殖表现至关重要,这一点从小型脊椎动物(包括鸟类)的限食实验中得到了证明。然而,每日的喂食时间是否会影响繁殖还知之甚少。本研究调查了每日食物可获得时间对斑马雀繁殖性能和卵及后代存活率质量的影响()。在随机配对的鸟类中,它们在 12 小时:12 小时光照:黑暗周期下被饲养约 52 周,食物可获得期被限制在早上 4 小时(早上食物可获得(FA)组)或晚上(晚上 FA 组),对照组提供食物;因此,早上 FA 组的每日禁食期开始于食物可获得后的 4 小时后,并且与晚上 FA 组的夜间饥饿连续。这两种食物限制都对生殖健康产生了不利影响,表现为性激素和中催产素水平降低,但一般代谢没有差异,甲状腺素和三碘甲状腺原氨酸水平没有差异。将食物可获得期限制为 4 小时对繁殖性能产生负面影响,尽管在早上和晚上 FA 组中存在配对间的差异。特别是,晚上 FA 组的繁殖开始时间延迟,繁殖成功率下降,但在早上 FA 组中则没有;相反,在早上 FA 组中,后代的健康状况严重受损,但在晚上 FA 组中则没有。此外,早上 FA 组的雌性健康状况更好,这意味着在父母提供食物方面存在性别偏见。总的来说,我们在斑马雀中证明了“数量”(产生和/或存活的后代数量)与“质量”(后代的健康状况)之间的权衡,这与人类类似,人类是昼行性动物,并且全年都保持繁殖能力。