Andrew Jacob R, Garland Theodore, Chappell Mark A, Zhao Meng, Horrell Nathan D, Saltzman Wendy
Physiol Biochem Zool. 2020 Jan/Feb;93(1):75-86. doi: 10.1086/706863.
In male mammals that provide care for their offspring, fatherhood can lead to changes in behavioral, morphological, and physiological traits, some of which might constitute trade-offs. However, relatively little is known about these changes, especially across multiple reproductive bouts, which are expected to magnify differences between fathers and nonreproductive males. We evaluated consequences of fatherhood in the monogamous, biparental California mouse () across seven consecutive reproductive bouts. We compared breeding adult males (housed with sham-ovariectomized females) with two control groups: nonbreeding males (housed with ovariectomized females treated with estrogen and progesterone to induce estrous behavior) and virgin males (housed with untreated ovariectomized females). At five time points (before pairing, early postpartum of the first litter, late postpartum of the second litter, early postpartum of the sixth litter, and late postpartum of the seventh litter or comparable time points for nonbreeding and virgin males), we measured males' body composition, hematocrit, predatory aggression, resting metabolic rate, maximal oxygen consumption (), grip strength, and sprint speed. We also weighed organs at the final time point. We predicted that fathers would have lower relative body fat and lower performance abilities compared with control groups and that these effects would become more pronounced with increasing parity. Contrary to predictions, breeding and control males differed in surprisingly few measures, and the number and magnitude of differences did not increase with parity. Thus, our expectations regarding trade-offs were not met. As reported in studies of single reproductive events, these results suggest that fatherhood has few costs in this species when housed under standard laboratory conditions, even across multiple reproductive bouts.
在为后代提供照料的雄性哺乳动物中,成为父亲会导致行为、形态和生理特征发生变化,其中一些变化可能构成权衡取舍。然而,对于这些变化我们了解得相对较少,尤其是在多次繁殖周期中,预计这些繁殖周期会放大父亲与未繁殖雄性之间的差异。我们评估了一夫一妻制、双亲抚育的加利福尼亚小鼠连续七个繁殖周期中成为父亲的后果。我们将繁殖成年雄性(与假卵巢切除的雌性关在一起)与两个对照组进行了比较:非繁殖雄性(与用雌激素和孕酮处理以诱导发情行为的卵巢切除雌性关在一起)和处男雄性(与未处理的卵巢切除雌性关在一起)。在五个时间点(配对前、第一窝幼崽产后早期、第二窝幼崽产后晚期、第六窝幼崽产后早期以及第七窝幼崽产后晚期或非繁殖和处男雄性的可比时间点),我们测量了雄性的身体组成、血细胞比容、捕食性攻击行为、静息代谢率、最大耗氧量()、握力和短跑速度。我们还在最后一个时间点对器官进行了称重。我们预测,与对照组相比,父亲的相对体脂会更低,表现能力也会更低,并且随着胎次增加这些影响会更加明显。与预测相反,繁殖雄性和对照雄性在令人惊讶的少数测量指标上存在差异,并且差异的数量和程度并没有随着胎次增加。因此,我们关于权衡取舍的预期没有得到满足。正如在单次繁殖事件的研究中所报道的那样,这些结果表明,在标准实验室条件下饲养时,即使经历多次繁殖周期,成为父亲在这个物种中也几乎没有代价。