Hussain Robert, Recknagel Hans, Elmer Kathryn R
School of Biodiversity, One Health & Veterinary Medicine, College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences University of Glasgow Glasgow UK.
Present address: Biotechnical Faculty, Department of Biology University of Ljubljana Ljubljana Slovenia.
Ecol Evol. 2024 Aug 16;14(8):e70171. doi: 10.1002/ece3.70171. eCollection 2024 Aug.
Pregnancy is a physiological cost of reproduction for animals that rely on fleeing to avoid predators. Costs of reproduction are predicted to differ between alternative reproductive strategies or modes, such as egg-laying (oviparity) or live-bearing (viviparity). However, disentangling the factors that comprise this cost and how it differs for oviparous or viviparous females is challenging due to myriad environmental, biological, and evolutionary confounds. Here, we tested the hypothesis that costs of pregnancy differ between oviparous and viviparous common lizards (). We predicted that the degree of locomotor impairment during pregnancy and therefore the cost of reproduction would be higher in viviparous females. We conducted our experiment in a hybrid zone containing oviparous and viviparous common lizards. Due to the common environment and inclusion of hybrid individuals, we could infer whether differences were inherent to parity mode. We found that the average and maximum running speed of pregnant females was slower than after they had given birth or laid eggs. Viviparous females experienced an additional pregnancy weight burden and for a longer time period, but were not slower at running than pregnant oviparous females. In addition, we found a parity mode-specific effect of reproductive investment; producing larger clutches was costlier for the locomotor performance of viviparous females for reasons other than the mass increase. Locomotor costs were found to be intermediate in hybrid females, indicating that they are specific to each reproductive mode. Our study shows that viviparous females experience an additional physical and physiological cost of pregnancy and reproductive investment. This two-fold cost implies that viviparous females modulate resource allocation decisions and/or adjust their behavioural responses that result from locomotor impairment.
对于依靠逃跑来躲避捕食者的动物而言,怀孕是繁殖的一种生理代价。预计繁殖成本在不同的繁殖策略或模式之间会有所不同,例如产卵(卵生)或胎生(胎生)。然而,由于众多环境、生物和进化方面的混杂因素,要理清构成这种成本的因素以及卵生或胎生雌性动物的成本差异具有挑战性。在这里,我们检验了一个假设,即卵生和胎生普通蜥蜴的怀孕成本存在差异。我们预测,怀孕期间的运动损伤程度以及因此产生的繁殖成本在胎生雌性动物中会更高。我们在一个包含卵生和胎生普通蜥蜴的杂交区域进行了实验。由于环境相同且包含杂交个体,我们可以推断差异是否是繁殖模式所固有的。我们发现,怀孕雌性的平均和最大奔跑速度比它们分娩或产卵后要慢。胎生雌性经历了额外的怀孕体重负担,且持续时间更长,但在奔跑速度上并不比怀孕的卵生雌性慢。此外,我们发现了繁殖投资对繁殖模式的特定影响;对于胎生雌性的运动表现来说,产下更大的卵 clutch 成本更高,原因并非仅仅是体重增加。我们发现杂交雌性的运动成本处于中间水平,这表明运动成本是每种繁殖模式所特有的。我们的研究表明,胎生雌性在怀孕和繁殖投资方面会经历额外的身体和生理成本。这种双重成本意味着胎生雌性会调整资源分配决策和/或调整因运动损伤而产生的行为反应。