Department of Biology, University of Turku, Turku, Finland.
Novia University of Applied Sciences, Ekenäs, Finland.
J Anim Ecol. 2023 Apr;92(4):850-862. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13894. Epub 2023 Feb 12.
Early-life conditions can have long-term fitness consequences. However, it is still unclear what optimal rearing conditions are, especially for long-lived carnivores. A more diverse diet ('balanced diet') might optimize nutrient availability and allow young to make experiences with a larger diversity of prey, whereas a narrow diet breadth ('specialized diet') might result in overall higher energy net gain. A diet that is dominated by a specific prey type (i.e. fish, 'prey type hypothesis') might be beneficial or detrimental, depending for example, on its toxicity or contaminant load. Generalist predators such as the white-tailed eagle Haliaeetus albicilla provide an interesting possibility to examine the relationship between early life diet and long-term offspring survival. In the Åland Islands, an archipelago in the Baltic Sea, white-tailed eagles live in various coastal habitats and feed on highly variable proportions of birds and fish. We use data from 21,116 prey individuals that were collected from 120 territories during the annual surveys, to examine how early-life diet is associated with apparent annual survival of 574 ringed and molecular-sexed eaglets. We supplement this analysis by assessing the relationships between diet, reproductive performance and nestling physical condition, to consider whether they are confounding with possible long-term associations. We find that early-life diet is associated with long-term fitness: Nestlings that are fed a diverse diet are in lower physical condition but have higher survival rates. Eagles that are fed more fish as nestlings have lower survival as breeding-age adults, but territories associated with fish-rich diets have higher breeding success. Our results show that young carnivores benefit from a high diversity of prey in their natal territory, either through a nutritional or learning benefit, explaining the higher survival rates. The strong relationship between early-life diet and adult survival suggests that early life shapes adult foraging decisions and that eating fish is associated with high costs. This could be due to high levels of contaminants or high competition for fish-rich territories. Long-lasting consequences of early-life diet are likely not only limited to individual-level consequences but have the potential to drive eco-evolutionary dynamics in this population.
早期生活条件会对长期适应能力产生影响。然而,目前仍不清楚什么是最佳的养育条件,特别是对于长寿的肉食动物而言。多样化的饮食(“均衡饮食”)可能会优化营养物质的可用性,并使幼崽有机会接触更多种类的猎物,而狭窄的饮食范围(“专门饮食”)则可能导致总体上更高的能量净收益。以特定猎物类型为主的饮食(即鱼类,“猎物类型假说”)可能有益或有害,具体取决于其毒性或污染物含量等因素。像白尾海雕这样的杂食性捕食者为研究早期生活饮食与后代长期生存之间的关系提供了一个有趣的可能性。在波罗的海的阿尔兰群岛,白尾海雕生活在各种沿海栖息地,以鸟类和鱼类的不同比例为食。我们利用在每年的调查中从 120 个领地收集到的 21116 个猎物个体的数据,来研究早期生活饮食与 574 只被环志和分子性别鉴定的雏鹰的明显年度存活率之间的关系。我们通过评估饮食、繁殖性能和雏鸟身体状况之间的关系来补充这一分析,以考虑它们是否与可能的长期关联相混淆。我们发现,早期生活饮食与长期适应能力有关:以多样化饮食喂养的雏鸟身体状况较差,但存活率较高。作为幼鸟时以鱼类为食较多的海雕在成年繁殖时的存活率较低,但与富含鱼类的食物相关的领地繁殖成功率较高。我们的研究结果表明,幼肉食动物从其出生地的猎物多样性中受益,无论是通过营养或学习方面的好处,从而提高了存活率。早期生活饮食与成年期生存之间的强相关性表明,早期生活塑造了成年期的觅食决策,而吃鱼则与高成本相关。这可能是由于污染物水平较高或对富含鱼类的领地的竞争激烈所致。早期生活饮食的长期后果不仅可能局限于个体层面的后果,而且有可能推动该种群的生态进化动态。