Ceacero Francisco, Komárková Martina, García Andrés J, Gallego Laureano
Department of Animal Science and Food Processing, Faculty of Tropical AgriSciences, Czech University of Life Sciences, Kamýcká 129, 165 00 Praha 6 - Suchdol, Czech Republic.
Department of Ethology, Institute of Animal Science, Přátelství 815, 104 01 Praha - Uhříněves, Czech Republic.
Curr Zool. 2019 Jun;65(3):269-277. doi: 10.1093/cz/zoy049. Epub 2018 Jun 29.
Maternal effects occur when the phenotype of the mother influences that of the young to the detriment of her survival, growth or fitness. The investment of the mother can be affected by maternal body condition and/or experience. Trivers-Willard Hypothesis (TWH) and Local Resource Competition Hypothesis (LRCH) are the main hypotheses used to explain bias in birth sex-ratios in mammals, as well as for sex-biased maternal investment. Both hypotheses suggest that a different amount of investment must be expected according to the sex of the young. However, recent studies suggest that these differences are not in quantity but in the strategies: mechanisms and objectives may differ for each sex. We studied how maternal characteristics (age, body mass, body condition, and dominance status) influence relevant aspects of the birth and early growth of the calf (birth date, birth body mass, body mass at weaning, and body condition at weaning) separately for each sex; and how that investment is mediated by milk production and composition (lactose, fat, and protein). One hundred eighty-eight newborns from 75 captive red deer hinds aged from 2 to 19 years were analyzed. The main differential investment observed was related to birth date: when producing a female, hinds give birth earlier in the season only if they have a good body condition; however, when gestating a male it is the older hinds those which deliver earlier. Subsequently, milk production and composition are correlated with birth body mass in female calves, but to weaning body mass in males. Thus, only hind body mass affects the weaning body mass of female calves, compared with age and hind body mass in males. These results suggest that while TWH fits the maternal investment strategy found for male calves, it is LRCH which correlates with the maternal investment patterns observed for females.
母体效应是指母亲的表型影响子代的表型,同时对母亲自身的生存、生长或适合度产生不利影响。母亲的投入会受到母体身体状况和/或经验的影响。特里弗斯-威拉德假说(TWH)和局部资源竞争假说(LRCH)是用于解释哺乳动物出生性别比偏差以及性别偏向性母体投入的主要假说。这两种假说都表明,根据子代的性别,预期会有不同数量的投入。然而,最近的研究表明,这些差异并非体现在数量上,而是体现在策略上:每种性别的机制和目标可能有所不同。我们分别研究了母体特征(年龄、体重、身体状况和优势地位)如何影响每一种性别的幼崽出生和早期生长的相关方面(出生日期、出生体重、断奶时体重和断奶时身体状况);以及这种投入是如何通过乳汁产量和成分(乳糖、脂肪和蛋白质)来调节的。我们分析了来自75头年龄在2至19岁之间的圈养马鹿母鹿的188只新生幼崽。观察到的主要差异投入与出生日期有关:当生下雌性幼崽时,只有身体状况良好的母鹿才会在季节早期分娩;然而,当怀有雄性幼崽时,年龄较大的母鹿会更早分娩。随后,乳汁产量和成分与雌性幼崽的出生体重相关,但与雄性幼崽的断奶体重相关。因此,与雄性幼崽的年龄和母鹿体重相比,只有母鹿体重会影响雌性幼崽的断奶体重。这些结果表明,虽然TWH符合在雄性幼崽中发现的母体投入策略,但与在雌性中观察到的母体投入模式相关的是LRCH。