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Zebra finch nestlings, rather than parents, suffer from raising broods under low nutritional conditions

机译:斑马雀科雏鸟,而不是父母,在低营养状况下遭受养育

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摘要

In sexually reproducing species, parents and offspring have different optima in terms of the amount of parental investment. For offspring, higher investment than the parental optimum generally increases their fitness. However, such higher investment will, in theory, result in net parental fitness loss because increased benefits from current offspring will be more than offset by a potential decrease in parental survival or future reproduction. Whether and how parents respond to a shortfall in resources might therefore have important fitness consequences. Here, we manipulate the nutritional condition of captive zebra finch families to investigate how variation in environmental conditions influences parental resource allocation between themselves and their offspring. By allowing the same zebra finch pairs to raise one brood under high and another brood under low nutritional conditions, we found that parents lost more body mass and their offspring grew at slower rates under low nutritional conditions. Therefore, both parents and their offspring were affected by the nutritional treatments. Offspring incurred greater costs, because slower growth rates under low nutritional conditions resulted in an overall lower body mass of nestlings after reaching independence. Nutritional treatments had sex-specific effects on parental body mass, because, in contrast to fathers, only mothers recouped their losses under high nutritional conditions. Furthermore, both parents spent less time brooding their nestlings under low nutritional conditions. Parental strategies hence vary with the nutritional quality of their food, even in captivity, supporting the idea that parental resource allocation may be driven by the expected costs and benefits from current offspring.
机译:在有性繁殖的物种中,父母和后代在父母投资的数量上有不同的最优值。对于后代来说,高于父母最优水平的投资通常会增加他们的适应性。然而,从理论上讲,这种更高的投资将导致父母健康状况的净损失,因为现有子女增加的收益将被父母存活率或未来繁殖的潜在下降所抵消。因此,父母是否以及如何应对资源短缺可能会对健康产生重要影响。在这里,我们操纵圈养斑马雀家庭的营养状况,以调查环境条件的变化如何影响它们与后代之间的亲本资源分配。通过让同一对斑马雀在高营养条件下饲养一窝,在低营养条件下饲养另一窝,我们发现,父母在低营养条件下损失了更多体重,他们的后代生长速度较慢。因此,父母及其子女都受到营养治疗的影响。后代的成本更高,因为在低营养条件下生长速度较慢,导致雏鸟在达到独立状态后体重总体较低。营养治疗对父母的体重有性别特异性影响,因为与父亲相比,只有母亲在高营养条件下才能弥补损失。此外,父母双方在低营养条件下育雏的时间都较少。因此,即使在圈养条件下,父母的策略也会因食物的营养质量而有所不同,这支持了这样一种观点,即父母的资源分配可能是由当前后代的预期成本和收益驱动的。

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