Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences (JIRCAS), Livestock and Environment Division, Ohwashi 1-1, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8686, Japan; Laboratory of Insect Ecology, Graduate School of Agriculture Kyoto University Kitashirakawa-Oiwake-cho, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan.
CIRAD, UMR CBGP, F-34398 Montpellier, France; Centre National de Lutte Anti-acridienne (CNLAA), Aït-Melloul, BP 125, Inezgane, Agadir, Morocco; Ibn Zohr University, Agadir, Morocco.
J Insect Physiol. 2020 Apr;122:104020. doi: 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2020.104020. Epub 2020 Feb 6.
Egg-size adjustment is one of the important plastic life-history traits for animals living in heterogeneous environments. The adaptive investment hypothesis predicts that mothers should increase progeny size according to certain cues predicting adverse future conditions of their offspring. However, reproductive resources are limited, and females have to simultaneously reduce egg number to allocate more resources to increase size. It remains unclear how single individuals alter egg size and number according to temporally heterogeneous environments. In the present study, we examined how desert locusts, Schistocerca gregaria, plastically alter egg size and number according to population density. We also investigated the trans-generational maternal effects on progeny characteristics as well as their own maternal physiological response (oviposition interval). Females kept in crowded conditions laid significantly larger and heavier eggs by reducing clutch size (number of eggs per egg pod) compared to isolated females, suggesting the existence of a reproductive trade-off between the two traits. The crowding-forced isolated females induced concerted changes not only in egg size but also in egg number tending towards those characteristics of gregarious control, implying that single individuals showed trade-off when egg size was increased. Double-blind testing confirmed the rapid crowding effects on egg size. Females also responded to crowding by extending the oviposition interval. As the oviposition interval extended, egg size increased, but clutch size decreased. Eggs from crowding-forced isolated females began to produce gregarious-phase type hatchlings (large and black) instead of solitarious-phase type ones (small and green). These results suggested that S. gregaria plastically manipulate egg size by regulating egg numbers and egg production rate, and indicated the presence of trans-generational maternal effects on progeny phase.
卵大小的调整是生活在异质环境中的动物的重要可塑性生命史特征之一。适应投资假说预测,母亲应该根据某些预测后代不利未来条件的线索来增加后代的大小。然而,生殖资源是有限的,女性必须同时减少卵的数量,以将更多的资源分配给增加大小。目前尚不清楚单个个体如何根据时间异质的环境来改变卵的大小和数量。在本研究中,我们研究了沙漠蝗 Schistocerca gregaria 如何根据种群密度灵活改变卵的大小和数量。我们还研究了母代对后代特征的跨代母体效应,以及它们自身的母体生理反应(产卵间隔)。与隔离的雌性相比,生活在拥挤条件下的雌性通过减少卵囊中的卵数(每卵囊中的卵数)显著产下更大、更重的卵,这表明这两个特征之间存在生殖权衡。拥挤迫使隔离的雌性不仅在卵大小上而且在卵数量上发生协同变化,倾向于群居对照的特征,这意味着单个个体在增加卵大小时表现出权衡。双盲测试证实了快速拥挤对卵大小的影响。雌性还通过延长产卵间隔来应对拥挤。随着产卵间隔的延长,卵的大小增加,但卵囊的数量减少。来自拥挤迫使隔离的雌性的卵开始产生群居型幼虫(大而黑),而不是独居型幼虫(小而绿)。这些结果表明,S. gregaria 通过调节卵的数量和产卵率来灵活地操纵卵的大小,并表明母代对后代阶段存在跨代母体效应。