Variable juvenile growth rates and offspring size: a response to anthropogenic shifts in prey size among populations.

IF 2.3 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY Oecologia Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-09-20 DOI:10.1007/s00442-024-05623-x
Jeremy D Chamberlain, Ian T Clifton, Matthew E Gifford
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Abstract

Environmental variables, such as resource quality, shape growth in organisms, dictating body size, an important correlate of fitness. Variation in prey characteristics among populations is frequently associated with similar variation in predator body sizes. Anthropogenic alterations to prey landscapes impose novel ecological pressures on predators that may shift predator phenotypes. Research has focused on determining the adaptability of the phenotypic response by testing its genetic heritability. Here, we asked if anthropogenic shifts in prey size across the landscape correlate with juvenile growth rates among populations of watersnakes with divergent life-history phenotypes. We sought to determine if growth rate variation is the product of genetic adaptation or a non-heritable phenotypic response. Using a common-garden design, we measured growth of neonate snakes from fish farms varying in prey size. We found juvenile growth rates are faster for snakes with larger initial body sizes and from populations with larger average prey sizes. Our data suggest variability in juvenile grow rates within and among populations are not the product of genetic adaptation, but the indirect consequence of initial offspring size variation and prey consumption. We propose larger offspring sizes may favor increased juvenile growth rates, mediated through a larger morphological capacity to consume and process energy resources relative to smaller individuals. This experiment provides evidence supporting the growing body of literature that non-heritable responses may be significant drivers of rapid phenotypic divergence among populations across a landscape. This mechanism may explain the stability and colonization of populations in response to rapid, human-mediated, landscape changes.

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幼体生长速度和后代大小的变化:对不同种群间猎物大小人为变化的反应。
环境变量(如资源质量)会影响生物的生长,并决定生物的体型,而体型是生物适应性的一个重要相关因素。不同种群之间猎物特征的变化往往与捕食者体型的类似变化相关。人类对猎物景观的改变给捕食者带来了新的生态压力,可能会改变捕食者的表型。研究的重点是通过测试表型反应的遗传遗传性来确定其适应性。在这里,我们想知道猎物大小在景观上的人为变化是否与具有不同生活史表型的水蛇种群的幼蛇生长率相关。我们试图确定生长率的变化是遗传适应的产物还是不可遗传的表型反应。我们采用共同花园设计,测量了来自不同猎物大小的养鱼场的新生蛇的生长情况。我们发现,初始体型较大和来自平均猎物体型较大种群的蛇的幼蛇生长速度较快。我们的数据表明,种群内部和种群之间幼蛇生长速度的差异不是遗传适应的产物,而是后代初始体型差异和猎物消耗的间接结果。我们认为,与较小的个体相比,较大的后代个体在消耗和处理能量资源方面具有更大的形态能力,从而有利于提高幼体生长率。这项实验为越来越多的文献提供了支持证据,这些文献认为,非遗传性反应可能是整个景观中种群间表型快速分化的重要驱动因素。这种机制可以解释种群在人类推动的快速景观变化中的稳定性和殖民化。
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来源期刊
Oecologia
Oecologia 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
192
审稿时长
5.3 months
期刊介绍: Oecologia publishes innovative ecological research of international interest. We seek reviews, advances in methodology, and original contributions, emphasizing the following areas: Population ecology, Plant-microbe-animal interactions, Ecosystem ecology, Community ecology, Global change ecology, Conservation ecology, Behavioral ecology and Physiological Ecology. In general, studies that are purely descriptive, mathematical, documentary, and/or natural history will not be considered.
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