首页> 外文期刊>Ecology and Evolution >Within species support for the expensive tissue hypothesis: a negative association between brain size and visceral fat storage in females of the Pacific seaweed pipefish
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Within species support for the expensive tissue hypothesis: a negative association between brain size and visceral fat storage in females of the Pacific seaweed pipefish

机译:物种内部支持昂贵的组织假说:太平洋海带pipe鱼雌性的大脑大小与内脏脂肪储存之间呈负相关

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Abstract The brain is one of the most energetically expensive organs in the vertebrate body. Consequently, the high cost of brain development and maintenance is predicted to constrain adaptive brain size evolution (the expensive tissue hypothesis, ETH). Here, we test the ETH in a teleost fish with predominant female mating competition (reversed sex roles) and male pregnancy, the pacific seaweed pipefish Syngnathus schlegeli . The relative size of the brain and other energetically expensive organs (kidney, liver, heart, gut, visceral fat, and ovary/testis) was compared among three groups: pregnant males, nonpregnant males and egg producing females. Brood size in pregnant males was unrelated to brain size or the size of any other organ, whereas positive relationships were found between ovary size, kidney size, and liver size in females. Moreover, we found that the size of energetically expensive organs (brain, heart, gut, kidney, and liver) as well as the amount of visceral fat did not differ between pregnant and nonpregnant males. However, we found marked differences in relative size of the expensive organs between sexes. Females had larger liver and kidney than males, whereas males stored more visceral fat than females. Furthermore, in females we found a negative correlation between brain size and the amount of visceral fat, whereas in males, a positive trend between brain size and both liver and heart size was found. These results suggest that, while the majority of variation in the size of various expensive organs in this species likely reflects that individuals in good condition can afford to allocate resources to several organs, the cost of the expensive brain was visible in the visceral fat content of females, possibly due to the high costs associated with female egg production.
机译:摘要大脑是脊椎动物体内能量消耗最大的器官之一。因此,预计大脑发育和维护的高昂费用将限制自适应大脑大小的演变(昂贵的组织假设,ETH)。在这里,我们在雌性交配竞争激烈(性角色相反)和雄性怀孕的太平洋硬骨鱼中测试了ETH,这是太平洋海藻石嘴鱼Syngnathus schlegeli。在三组中比较了大脑和其他能量消耗大的器官(肾脏,肝脏,心脏,肠,内脏脂肪和卵巢/睾丸)的相对大小:雄性怀孕的男性,未怀孕的雄性和产卵的雌性。怀孕男性的生殖大小与大脑大小或任何其他器官的大小无关,而女性的卵巢大小,肾脏大小和肝脏大小之间呈正相关。此外,我们发现男性和男性的能量消耗器官(大脑,心脏,肠,肾脏和肝脏)的大小以及内脏脂肪的含量没有差异。但是,我们发现两性之间昂贵器官的相对大小存在明显差异。女性的肝脏和肾脏比男性大,而男性储存的内脏脂肪比女性多。此外,在女性中,我们发现大脑大小与内脏脂肪量之间呈负相关,而在男性中,大脑大小与肝脏和心脏大小之间呈正趋势。这些结果表明,尽管该物种中各种昂贵器官大小的大部分变化可能反映出状况良好的个体可以负担得起将资源分配给多个器官的费用,但昂贵的大脑的成本在其内脏脂肪含量中可见。雌性,可能是由于雌性卵的生产成本高昂。

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