Interplay of cooperative breeding and predation risk on egg allocation and reproductive output

IF 2.5 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Behavioral Ecology Pub Date : 2024-02-27 DOI:10.1093/beheco/arae010
Rita Fortuna, Rita Covas, Pietro B D’Amelio, Liliana R Silva, Charline Parenteau, Louis Bliard, Fanny Rybak, Claire Doutrelant, Matthieu Paquet
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Abstract

Predation risk can influence behaviour, reproductive investment and, ultimately, individuals’ fitness. In high-risk environments, females often reduce allocation to reproduction, which can affect offspring phenotype and breeding success. In cooperative breeders, helpers contribute to feed the offspring, and groups often live and forage together. Helpers can therefore improve reproductive success, but also influence breeders’ condition, stress levels and predation risk. Yet, whether helper presence can buffer the effects of predation risk on maternal reproductive allocation remains unstudied. Here, we used the cooperatively breeding sociable weaver Philetairus socius to test interactive effects of predation risk and breeding group size on maternal allocation to clutch size, egg mass, yolk mass, and yolk corticosterone. We increased perceived predation risk before egg laying using playbacks of the adults’ main predator, gabar goshawk (Micronisus gabar). We also tested interactive effects of group size and prenatal predator-playbacks on offspring hatching and fledging probability. Predator-exposed females laid eggs with 4% lighter yolks, but predator-calls’ exposure did not clearly affect clutch size, egg mass or egg corticosterone levels. Playback-treatment effects on yolk mass were independent of group size, suggesting that helpers’ presence did not mitigate predation risk effects on maternal allocation. Although predator-induced reductions in yolk mass may decrease nutrients’ availability to offspring, potentially affecting their survival, playback-treatment effects on hatching and fledging success were not evident. The interplay between helper presence and predator effects on maternal reproductive investment is still an overlooked area of life history and physiological evolutionary trade-offs that requires further studies.
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合作繁殖和捕食风险对卵子分配和生殖产量的相互作用
捕食风险会影响行为、繁殖投资,并最终影响个体的健康状况。在高风险环境中,雌性通常会减少对繁殖的分配,这会影响后代的表型和繁殖成功率。在合作繁殖者中,帮工为后代提供食物,而且群体通常一起生活和觅食。因此,帮助者可以提高繁殖成功率,但也会影响繁殖者的状况、压力水平和捕食风险。然而,助养者的存在是否能缓冲捕食风险对母体生殖分配的影响仍未得到研究。在这里,我们利用合作繁殖的交织栉水母(Philetairus socius)来检验捕食风险和繁殖群体大小对母体分配离合器大小、卵子质量、卵黄质量和卵黄皮质酮的交互影响。我们在成鸟产卵前通过播放成鸟的主要捕食者--嘎巴大鹰(Micronisus gabar)的声音来增加捕食风险。我们还测试了群体大小和产前捕食者回放对后代孵化和羽化概率的交互影响。受捕食者影响的雌鸟产下的蛋蛋黄颜色浅4%,但捕食者的叫声并没有明显影响鸟群大小、蛋质量或蛋皮质酮水平。播放处理对卵黄质量的影响与群体大小无关,这表明帮助者的存在并不能减轻捕食风险对母体分配的影响。尽管捕食者诱导的卵黄质量减少可能会降低后代的营养供应,从而可能影响其存活率,但回放处理对孵化和羽化成功率的影响并不明显。辅助者的存在和捕食者对母体生殖投资的影响之间的相互作用仍然是生活史和生理进化权衡中一个被忽视的领域,需要进一步研究。
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来源期刊
Behavioral Ecology
Behavioral Ecology 环境科学-动物学
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
8.30%
发文量
93
审稿时长
3.0 months
期刊介绍: Studies on the whole range of behaving organisms, including plants, invertebrates, vertebrates, and humans, are included. Behavioral Ecology construes the field in its broadest sense to include 1) the use of ecological and evolutionary processes to explain the occurrence and adaptive significance of behavior patterns; 2) the use of behavioral processes to predict ecological patterns, and 3) empirical, comparative analyses relating behavior to the environment in which it occurs.
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