Département des sciences biologiques, Université du Québec à Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
Ecology. 2024 Jul;105(7):e4330. doi: 10.1002/ecy.4330. Epub 2024 May 27.
Species recovery following anthropogenic disturbances will depend on adaptations in survivorship and fecundity. Life-history theory predicts increased environmental stress will result in (1) shifts in resource allocation from fecundity to body growth/maintenance and (2) increased provisioning among offspring at the cost of reproductive output. For remnant populations that persist after forest harvesting, selection mediated through anthropogenic disturbances may affect resilience to additional stressors such as climate change. We tested how rapid changes in environmental conditions affected maternal investment strategies in two ground beetle species, Pterostichus pensylvanicus and Pterostichus coracinus, by comparing fecundity and survivorship in populations from recently clear-cut and uncut habitats. Using parents drawn from clear-cut or uncut stands, we reared progeny in both common garden and reciprocal transplant experiments. In P. pensylvanicus, we found that neither lineage nor rearing habitat affected the number of eggs laid per female or survivorship of offspring. However, eggs laid by females from clear-cuts were more likely to hatch and offspring reached maturity more quickly, suggesting increased provisioning per offspring. In P. coracinus, females from clear-cuts laid more eggs, and their eggs hatched more rapidly and had greater hatching success, suggesting increased investment in overall reproductive output and increased offspring provisioning. In the reciprocal transplant, we observed significant habitat by lineage interactions on survival in P. coracinus, with survivorship increasing when progeny were reared in novel habitats. In both species, increased maternal investment among offspring was not associated with a reduction in overall reproductive output, as anticipated. However, maternal investment among offspring declined with increasing female size, implying trade-offs between increased metabolic demand and fecundity. Taken together, our work suggests that females from more stressful, clear-cut habitats increased investment in fecundity, compared to females from uncut habitats, and may compensate for larval mortality. These changes were driven by smaller individuals, suggesting that increased environmental stress can influence the relationship between female size and maternal investment strategy. Additionally, reciprocal increases in offspring survivorship in habitats other than the parents suggest that adjacent areas between unharvested and clear-cut habitat may be useful in maintaining biodiversity under future climate stressors.
物种在人为干扰后能否恢复,取决于其在生存力和繁殖力方面的适应能力。生活史理论预测,环境压力的增加将导致(1)从繁殖力到身体生长/维持的资源分配转移,以及(2)以牺牲繁殖输出为代价,增加后代的供应。对于森林采伐后仍然存在的残余种群,通过人为干扰介导的选择可能会影响其对气候变化等额外胁迫因素的恢复能力。我们通过比较来自最近采伐和未采伐生境的两种步甲(鞘翅目步甲科)的繁殖力和存活率,来测试环境条件的快速变化如何影响母体投资策略。我们使用来自采伐或未采伐林分的亲代,在普通花园和互惠移植实验中培养后代。在 P. pensylvanicus 中,我们发现无论是谱系还是饲养栖息地都不会影响每个雌性产卵的数量或后代的存活率。然而,来自采伐地的雌性所产的卵更容易孵化,后代更快地达到成熟,这表明每个后代的供应增加了。在 P. coracinus 中,来自采伐地的雌性产卵更多,其卵孵化更快,孵化成功率更高,这表明其在整体繁殖输出和后代供应方面的投资增加了。在互惠移植中,我们观察到 P. coracinus 的生存存在显著的栖息地与谱系的相互作用,当后代在新栖息地中饲养时,存活率增加。在这两个物种中,后代之间增加的母体投资并没有像预期的那样导致整体繁殖输出的减少。然而,随着雌性个体大小的增加,后代之间的母体投资减少,这暗示着增加的代谢需求和繁殖力之间存在权衡。总的来说,我们的研究表明,与来自未采伐生境的雌性相比,来自压力更大的采伐生境的雌性增加了繁殖力的投资,这可能是为了弥补幼虫死亡率。这些变化是由较小的个体驱动的,这表明环境压力的增加可以影响雌性大小和母体投资策略之间的关系。此外,在父母以外的栖息地中,后代存活率的互惠增加表明,在未采伐和采伐生境之间的相邻区域可能有助于在未来的气候胁迫下维持生物多样性。