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首页> 外文期刊>Royal Society Open Science >How maternal investment varies with environmental factors and the age and physiological state of wild tsetse Glossina pallidipes and Glossina morsitans morsitans
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How maternal investment varies with environmental factors and the age and physiological state of wild tsetse Glossina pallidipes and Glossina morsitans morsitans

机译:孕产妇投资如何随环境因素以及野生采采蝇(Glossina pallidipes和Glossina morsitans morsitans)的年龄和生理状态而变化

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Theory suggests females should optimize resource allocation across reproductive bouts to maximize lifetime reproduction, balancing current and future reproductive efforts according to physiological state and projected survival and reproduction. Tests of these ideas focus on long-lived vertebrates: few measure age-related reproductive output in iteroparous invertebrates, or partition reserves between those allocated to offspring versus mothers. We investigated how maternal age, and environmental and physiological factors influence reproductive investment in wild tsetse, Glossina pallidipes Austen and G. morsitans morsitans Westwood. Tsetse provide a tractable system to measure reproductive allocation. Females exhibit high maternal investment, producing single, large offspring that rely exclusively on maternal reserves. We find that mothers in better physiological condition and experiencing cooler temperatures produce larger offspring. Pupal size increases significantly but weakly with age. In both species, females with less fat invest proportionately more in offspring. Post-partum fat decreases in flies with badly frayed wings: poor flight capability may limit their feeding efficiency, or they may sacrifice more reserves as a terminal investment. Our results support evidence that offspring size increases with maternal size, investment depends on the environment, and females with lower chances of future reproduction invest more into current offspring. We discuss the implications of maternal effects for predicting vector population responses to environmental change.
机译:理论认为,女性应优化生殖力之间的资源分配,以最大程度地延长一生的生殖能力,根据生理状态和预计的生存与繁殖来平衡当前和未来的生殖努力。对这些想法的检验集中在长寿的脊椎动物上:很少测量无脊椎动物无脊椎动物中与年龄相关的生殖输出,或在分配给后代与母亲之间分配储备的方法。我们调查了产妇年龄,环境和生理因素如何影响野生采采蝇,苍白凤梨奥斯丁和G. morsitans morsitans Westwood的生殖投资。采采蝇提供了一个易于测量的系统来衡量生殖分配。雌性具有很高的产妇投资,产生仅依靠母体储备的单个大后代。我们发现,处于更好的生理状态并且温度更低的母亲产生的后代更大。 pal的大小随年龄增长而明显增加,但微弱。在这两个物种中,脂肪较少的雌性在后代中的投入成比例。机翼磨损严重的果蝇产后脂肪减少:飞行能力差可能会限制其进食效率,或者可能会牺牲更多的储备作为终端投资。我们的结果支持以下证据:后代的大小随母亲的大小而增加,投资取决于环境,未来生育机会较低的雌性对当前后代的投资更多。我们讨论产妇效应对预测媒介种群对环境变化的反应的影响。

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