Infection Causes Trade-Offs between Development and Growth in Larval Amphibians.

IF 1.8 3区 生物学 Q3 PHYSIOLOGY Physiological and Biochemical Zoology Pub Date : 2023-11-01 Epub Date: 2023-11-10 DOI:10.1086/727729
Marissa Wright, Logan Oleson, Rebecca Witty, Kelley A Fritz, Lucas J Kirschman
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Abstract

AbstractTrade-offs between life history traits are context dependent; they vary depending on environment and life stage. Negative associations between development and growth often characterize larval life stages. Both growth and development consume large parts of the energy budget of young animals. The metabolic rate of animals should reflect differences in growth and developmental rates. Growth and development can also have negative associations with immune function because of their costs. We investigated how intraspecific variation in growth and development affected the metabolism of larval amphibians and whether intraspecific variation in growth, development, and metabolic rate could predict mortality and viral load in larvae infected with ranavirus. We also compared the relationship between growth and development before and after infection with ranavirus. We hypothesized that growth and development would affect metabolism and predicted that each would have a positive correlation with metabolic rate. We further hypothesized that allocation toward growth and development would increase ranavirus susceptibility and therefore predicted that larvae with faster growth, faster development, and higher metabolic rates would be more likely to die from ranavirus and have higher viral loads. Finally, we predicted that growth rate and developmental rate would have a negative association. Intraspecific variation in growth rate and developmental rate did not affect metabolism. Growth rate, developmental rate, and metabolism did not predict mortality from ranavirus or viral load. Larvae infected with ranavirus exhibited a trade-off between developmental rate and growth rate that was absent in uninfected larvae. Our results indicate a cost of ranavirus infection that is potentially due to both the infection-induced anorexia and the cost of infection altering priority rules for resource allocation.

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感染导致两栖动物幼虫在发育和生长之间进行权衡
摘要 生命史特征之间的权衡取决于环境;它们因环境和生命阶段而异。发育与生长之间的负相关往往是幼虫生命阶段的特征。生长和发育都会消耗幼年动物的大部分能量预算。动物的新陈代谢率应反映出生长和发育速度的差异。生长和发育也会因其成本而与免疫功能产生负相关。我们研究了生长和发育的种内差异如何影响两栖类幼虫的新陈代谢,以及生长、发育和新陈代谢率的种内差异是否可以预测感染了雷纳病毒的幼虫的死亡率和病毒载量。我们还比较了两栖类幼体在感染拉纳病毒前后的生长发育关系。我们假设生长和发育会影响新陈代谢,并预测生长和发育会与新陈代谢率呈正相关。我们进一步假设,生长和发育的分配会增加对拉纳病毒的易感性,因此预测生长快、发育快和代谢率高的幼虫更有可能死于拉纳病毒,病毒载量也更高。最后,我们预测生长速度和发育速度将呈负相关。生长率和发育率的种内差异并不影响新陈代谢。生长率、发育率和新陈代谢并不能预测因雷诺氏病毒或病毒载量造成的死亡率。感染了病毒的幼虫在发育速度和生长速度之间表现出一种权衡,而未感染病毒的幼虫则不存在这种权衡。我们的研究结果表明,感染拉那病毒的代价可能是感染引起的厌食和感染代价改变了资源分配的优先规则。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
62
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: Ecological and Evolutionary Approaches primarily publishes original research in animal physiology and biochemistry as considered from behavioral, ecological, and/or evolutionary perspectives. Studies at all levels of biological organization from the molecular to the whole organism are welcome, and work that integrates across levels of organization is particularly encouraged. Studies that focus on behavior or morphology are welcome, so long as they include ties to physiology or biochemistry, in addition to having an ecological or evolutionary context. Subdisciplines of interest include nutrition and digestion, salt and water balance, epithelial and membrane transport, gas exchange and transport, acid-base balance, temperature adaptation, energetics, structure and function of macromolecules, chemical coordination and signal transduction, nitrogen metabolism and excretion, locomotion and muscle function, biomechanics, circulation, behavioral, comparative and mechanistic endocrinology, sensory physiology, neural coordination, and ecotoxicology ecoimmunology.
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