Iglesias-Carrasco Maider, Zhang Jiayu, Noble Daniel W A
Evolution and Ecology of Sexual Interactions Group, Doñana Biological Station-CSIC, Seville, 41092, Spain.
Division of Ecology and Evolution, Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.
Behav Ecol. 2024 Apr 26;35(4):arae035. doi: 10.1093/beheco/arae035. eCollection 2024 Jul-Aug.
Exposure to increased temperatures during early development can lead to phenotypic plasticity in morphology, physiology, and behavior across a range of ectothermic animals. In addition, maternal effects are known to be important contributors to phenotypic variation in offspring. Whether the 2 factors interact to shape offspring morphology and behavior is rarely explored. This is critical because climate change is expected to impact both incubation temperature and maternal stress and resource allocation. Using a fully factorial design, and Bayesian multivariate mixed models, we explored how the manipulation of early thermal environment and yolk-quantity in eggs affected the morphology, performance, and antipredator behavior of 2 sympatric Australian skink species ( and ). We found that juveniles from the hot treatment were larger than those on the cold treatment in but not . Using repeated behavioral measures for individual lizards, we found an interaction between incubation temperature and maternal investment in performance, with running speed being affected in a species-specific way by the treatment. We predicted that changes in performance should influence antipredator responses. In support of this prediction, we found that maternal investment impacted antipredator behavior, with animals from the yolk-reduced and cold treatment resuming activity faster after a simulated predatory attack in . However, the prediction was not supported in . Our results highlight the importance of exploring the multifaceted role that environments play across generations to understand how different anthropogenic factors will impact wildlife in the future.
在早期发育过程中暴露于升高的温度下,会导致一系列变温动物在形态、生理和行为上出现表型可塑性。此外,母体效应是后代表型变异的重要因素。这两个因素是否相互作用以塑造后代的形态和行为,却很少有人探究。这一点至关重要,因为气候变化预计会影响孵化温度以及母体压力和资源分配。我们采用全因子设计和贝叶斯多元混合模型,探究了早期热环境的操控以及卵黄量对两种同域分布的澳大利亚石龙子物种(和)的形态、性能及反捕食行为的影响。我们发现,在物种中,接受热处理的幼体比接受冷处理的幼体更大,但在物种中并非如此。通过对个体蜥蜴进行重复行为测量,我们发现孵化温度与母体对性能的投入之间存在相互作用,奔跑速度受到处理方式的物种特异性影响。我们预测性能的变化会影响反捕食反应。为支持这一预测,我们发现母体投入会影响反捕食行为,在物种中,来自卵黄减少和冷处理的动物在模拟捕食攻击后恢复活动的速度更快。然而,这一预测在物种中未得到支持。我们的研究结果凸显了探究环境在跨代中所起的多方面作用的重要性,以便了解不同的人为因素未来将如何影响野生动物。