Maternal effect senescence and caloric restriction interact to affect fitness through changes in life history timing
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| Publication date | 01-2025 |
| Journal | Journal of Animal Ecology |
| Volume | Issue number | 94 | 1 |
| Pages (from-to) | 99-111 |
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| Abstract |
Environmental factors and individual attributes, and their
interactions, impact survival, growth and reproduction of an individual
throughout its life. In the clonal rotifer Brachionus, low food
conditions delay reproduction and extend lifespan. This species also
exhibits maternal effect senescence; the offspring of older mothers have
lower survival and reproductive output. In this paper, we explored the
population consequences of the individual-level interaction of maternal
age and low food availability.We built matrix population models for both ad libitum
and low food treatments, in which individuals are classified both by
their age and maternal age. Low food conditions reduced population
growth rate (Δλ = -0,0574)
and shifted the population structure to older maternal ages, but did
not detectably impact individual lifetime reproductive output.We analysed hypothetical scenarios in which reduced
fertility or survival led to approximately stationary populations that
maintained the shape of the difference in demographic rates between the
ad libitum and low food treatments. When fertility was reduced, the
populations were more evenly distributed across ages and maternal ages,
while the lower-survival models showed an increased concentration of
individuals in the youngest ages and maternal ages.Using life table response experiment analyses, we
compared populations grown under ad libitum and low food conditions in
scenarios representing laboratory conditions, reduced fertility and
reduced survival. In the laboratory scenario, the reduction in
population growth rate under low food conditions is primarily due to
decreased fertility in early life. In the lower-fertility scenario,
contributions from differences in fertility and survival are more
similar, and show trade-offs across both ages and maternal ages. In the
lower-survival scenario, the contributions from decreased fertility in
early life again dominate the difference in λ.These results demonstrate that processes that
potentially benefit individuals (e.g. lifespan extension) may actually
reduce fitness and population growth because of links with other
demographic changes (e.g. delayed reproduction). Because the
interactions of maternal age and low food availability depend on the
population structure, the fitness consequences of an environmental
change can only be fully understood through analysis that takes into
account the entire life cycle.
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| Document type | Article |
| Note | With supplementary file. |
| Language | English |
| Related dataset | Supplemental code and data for Hernandez et al. "Maternal effect senescence and caloric restriction interact to affect fitness through changes in life history timing" |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.14220 |
| Other links | https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85210159102 |
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