Selecting on age of female reproduction affects lifespan in both sexes and age-dependent reproductive effort in female (but not male) Ceratitis cosyra

2021 ◽  
Vol 75 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Malod ◽  
Petrus D. Roets ◽  
Henrika Bosua ◽  
C. Ruth Archer ◽  
Christopher W. Weldon
2015 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 1067-1079 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. M. Houslay ◽  
J. Hunt ◽  
M. C. Tinsley ◽  
L. F. Bussière

2016 ◽  
Vol 94 (5) ◽  
pp. 311-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Morin ◽  
M. Rughetti ◽  
S. Rioux-Paquette ◽  
M. Festa-Bianchet

In long-lived mammals, costs of reproduction may vary with age. The terminal investment hypothesis predicts greater reproductive effort as females approach the end of their life expectancy. We monitored 97 individually marked female Alpine chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra (L., 1758)) between 2007 and 2013 to determine how age-specific reproduction affected body mass and subsequent reproductive success. We captured and weighed females between April and August and monitored reproductive success from April to October through mother–kid associations. Reproductive success was strongly age-dependent and peaked at 70% for prime-aged females (4–7 years). Reproductive senescence began at 8 years, earlier than reported by other studies of ungulates. There was no clear evidence of reproductive costs in any age class. Reproductive success was very heterogeneous for old females, suggesting variability in the onset of senescence. Old females were less likely to reproduce in poor years despite being heavier than prime-aged females, suggesting reproductive restraint in late life rather than terminal investment. Female mass remained stable from May to August with no effect of lactation. Our results suggest that chamois reproductive strategy becomes increasingly conservative with age, resulting in no detectable costs of reproduction.


2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 20121078 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine L. Hayes ◽  
Isobel Booksmythe ◽  
Michael D. Jennions ◽  
Patricia R. Y. Backwell

Theory suggests that reproductive effort generally increases with age, but life-history models indicate that other outcomes are possible. Empirical data are needed to quantify variation in actual age-dependence. Data are readily attainable for females (e.g. clutch per egg size), but not for males (e.g. courtship effort). To quantify male effort one must: (i) experimentally control for potential age-dependent changes in female presence; and, crucially, (ii) distinguish between the likelihood of courtship being initiated, the display rate, and the total time invested in courting before stopping (‘courtship persistence’). We provide a simple experimental protocol, suitable for many taxa, to illustrate how to obtain this information. We studied courtship waving by male fiddler crabs, Uca annulipes . Given indeterminate growth, body size is correlated with age. Larger males were more likely to wave at females and waved more persistently. They did not, however, have a higher courtship rate (waves per second). A known female preference for males with higher display rates explains why, once waving is initiated, all males display at the same rate.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lourenço Falcão Rodrigues ◽  
Anne G. Hertel ◽  
Medardo Cruz López ◽  
Erick González-Medina ◽  
Julia Schroeder ◽  
...  

AbstractIdentifying age-dependent trade-offs between reproductive effort and survival in wild organisms is central for understanding the evolutionary mechanisms of senescence. According to the disposable soma theory, early-life energy investments in reproduction compromise late-life investments in somatic maintenance – leading to senescence. Once thought to only be detectable in captive populations, senescence has recently been documented by several longitudinal studies of wild organisms. However, some reproductive traits that are used to quantify senescence may also be shaped by other age-dependent processes such as mating tactics. For instance, polygamy, which is often positively associated with age, may lead to reduced gamete size due to trade-offs between gamete quantity and quality. Here we investigate how mating behaviour and senescence are associated with reproductive trade-offs of female snowy plovers (Charadrius nivosus). Snowy plovers are long-lived shorebirds (longevity record: 19 years) that produce several nests each year, with females either being polyandrous and sequentially changing partners between breeding attempts or remaining monogamous between attempts. We examined how age, seasonality, and mating tactics affect within-female variation in egg volume using repeated measures collected over a 14-year period. Our results provide clear evidence for senescence in snowy plover females starting at three years of age. Furthermore, females laid smaller eggs in years when they were polyandrous compared to years when they were monogamous, with early- and late-season clutches having the smallest eggs. We suggest that individual female reproductive performance is regulated by flexible mating tactics and age- and season-dependent effects. Our findings highlight the existence of multiple trade-offs for female reproductive investments that likely shape individual variation in lifetime reproductive success. We encourage future research investigating reproductive senescence of wild populations to incorporate age-dependent reproductive investments in light of mating system dynamics.Impact SummaryWhy do organisms senesce at older ages? Life-history theory predicts that early life investments in reproduction compromise future investment opportunities for somatic repair, which leads to senescence. Earlier works assumed that senescence was only observable in captive populations due to the high degree of extrinsic mortality experienced by wild organisms. However, with the expansion of longitudinal studies collecting repeated measures from wild individuals, recent works have identified key insights into the selective processes driving patterns of senescence in nature. Here, we use a 14-year longitudinal mark-recapture dataset of snowy plovers (Charadrius nivosus) breeding in a wild subtropical population in western Mexico to investigate age-dependent trade-offs between female reproductive effort and performance. The snowy plover is a long-lived shorebird characterized by a flexible polyandrous mating system. This rare breeding behaviour represents a unique background for investigating senescence in light of between and within-individual variation in reproductive investment. Our study focused on age-dependent dynamics of egg volume – a convenient measure of a female’s intrinsic reproductive investment, particularly in birds with precocial chicks. We explored age-related correlates of within-female egg volume dynamics while controlling for among-female variation and the confounding effect of trait-dependent (dis)appearance of young (or old) females in the population. Our results show that egg volume expresses an early-life increase followed by a late-life decrease, indicative of reproductive senescence. Furthermore, females tended to lay smaller eggs in years during which they were polyandrous than in years when they were monogamous. Notably, polyandry was not associated with age. As expected, egg volume was highly repeatable within females and clutches. We conclude that age-dependent reproductive effort is an important component driving between- and within-individual variation in reproductive performance of facultatively polygamous species. We encourage future works studying reproductive senescence of wild populations to incorporate age-dependent reproductive investment and mating tactics.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Caitlin R. Fong ◽  
Armand M. Kuris ◽  
Ryan F. Hechinger

AbstractSex can influence patterns of parasitism because males and females can differ in encounter with, and susceptibility to, parasites. We investigate an isopod parasite (Hemioniscus balani) that consumes ovarian fluid, blocking female function of its barnacle host, a simultaneous hermaphrodite. As a hermaphrodite, sex is fluid, and individuals may allocate energy differentially to male versus female reproduction. We predicted the relationship between barnacle size and female reproductive function influences the distribution of parasites within barnacle populations. We surveyed 12 populations spanning ~400 km of coastline of southern California and found intermediate-sized barnacles where most likely to be actively functioning as females. While it is unclear why larger individuals are less likely to be actively reproducing as females, we suggest this reduced likelihood is driven by increased investment in male reproductive effort at larger sizes. The female function-size relationship was mirrored by the relationship between size and parasitism. We suggest parasitism by Hemioniscus balani imposes a cost to female function, reinforcing the lack of investment in female function by the largest individuals. Within the subset of suitable (=female) hosts, infection probability increased with size. Hence, the distribution of female function, combined with selection for larger hosts, primarily dictated patterns of infection.


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 20160888 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cédric Lippens ◽  
Bruno Faivre ◽  
Clothilde Lechenault ◽  
Gabriele Sorci

Senescing individuals have poor survival prospects and low fecundity. They can also produce offspring with reduced survival and reproductive success. We tested the effect of parental age on the performance of descendants in the nematode Heligmosomoides polygyrus , an intestinal parasite of rodents. We found that offspring of senescing worms had reduced within-host survival and reduced egg shedding over the first month post-infection compared with offspring produced by young parents. These results suggest that declining offspring quality is a component of senescence in parasitic nematodes and might have evolutionary consequences for the optimal schedule of age-dependent investment into reproductive effort.


2020 ◽  
Vol 375 (1811) ◽  
pp. 20190614 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Renee Phillips ◽  
T. L. Goldberg ◽  
M. N. Muller ◽  
Z. P. Machanda ◽  
E. Otali ◽  
...  

Energy investment in reproduction is predicted to trade off against other necessary physiological functions like immunity, but it is unclear to what extent this impacts fitness in long-lived species. Among mammals, female primates, and especially apes, exhibit extensive periods of investment in each offspring. During this time, energy diverted to gestation and lactation is hypothesized to incur short and long-term deficits in maternal immunity and lead to accelerated ageing. We examined the relationship between reproduction and immunity, as measured by faecal parasite counts, in wild female chimpanzees ( Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii ) of Kibale National Park, Uganda. While we observed higher parasite shedding (counts of eggs, cysts and larvae) in pregnant chimpanzees relative to cycling females, parasites rapidly decreased during early lactation, the most energetically taxing phase of the reproductive cycle. Additionally, while our results indicate that parasite shedding increases with age, females with higher fertility for their age had lower faecal parasite counts. Such findings support the hypothesis that the relatively conservative rate of female reproduction in chimpanzees may be protective against the negative effects of reproductive effort on health. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Evolution of the primate ageing process’.


2012 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 235-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathryn B. McNamara ◽  
Emile van Lieshout ◽  
Therésa M. Jones ◽  
Leigh W. Simmons

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