Am Nat. 2022 Dec;200(6):773-789. doi: 10.1086/721873. Epub 2022 Oct 7.
AbstractMaternal effects can give newborns a head start in life by adjusting natal phenotypes to natal environments, yet their strength and adaptiveness are often difficult to investigate in natural populations. Here, we studied anticipatory maternal effects and their adaptiveness in common lizards in a seminatural experimental system. Specifically, we investigated how maternal environments (i.e., vegetation cover) and maternal phenotype (i.e., activity levels and body length) can shape offspring phenotype. We further studied whether such maternal effects influenced offspring survival in natal environments varying with respect to vegetation cover, conspecific density, and, consequently, maternal fitness. More active females from dense vegetation habitats produced bigger offspring than their less active counterparts, the contrary being true for sparse vegetation habitats. Moreover, females from dense vegetation habitats produced more active offspring and more active offspring survived better in dense vegetation habitats, resulting in greater maternal fitness through maternal effects. These results suggest adaptive anticipatory maternal effects, induced by vegetation structure and mediated by activity levels that may shape early-life prospects in natal environments.
摘要
母体效应可以通过调整新生儿的表型来适应出生环境,从而使新生儿在生活中获得优势,但在自然种群中,母体效应的强度和适应性往往难以研究。在这里,我们在半自然实验系统中研究了普通蜥蜴的预期母体效应及其适应性。具体来说,我们研究了母体环境(即植被覆盖)和母体表型(即活动水平和身体长度)如何塑造后代的表型。我们进一步研究了这种母体效应对后代在随植被覆盖、同种密度变化的出生环境中的存活率的影响,而母体密度会影响母体的适应性。来自茂密植被栖息地的更活跃的雌性会比不活跃的雌性产生更大的后代,而在稀疏植被栖息地则相反。此外,来自茂密植被栖息地的雌性会产生更活跃的后代,而更活跃的后代在茂密植被栖息地中生存得更好,从而通过母体效应提高了母体的适应性。这些结果表明,由植被结构诱导的、通过活动水平介导的适应性预期母体效应可能会影响出生环境中的早期生活前景。