Literature DB >> 18631112

A general model for the scaling of offspring size and adult size.

Daniel S Falster1, Angela T Moles, Mark Westoby.   

Abstract

Understanding evolutionary coordination among different life-history traits is a key challenge for ecology and evolution. Here we develop a general quantitative model predicting how offspring size should scale with adult size by combining a simple model for life-history evolution with a frequency-dependent survivorship model. The key innovation is that larger offspring are afforded three different advantages during ontogeny: higher survivorship per time, a shortened juvenile phase, and advantage during size-competitive growth. In this model, it turns out that size-asymmetric advantage during competition is the factor driving evolution toward larger offspring sizes. For simplified and limiting cases, the model is shown to produce the same predictions as the previously existing theory on which it is founded. The explicit treatment of different survival advantages has biologically important new effects, mainly through an interaction between total maternal investment in reproduction and the duration of competitive growth. This goes on to explain alternative allometries between log offspring size and log adult size, as observed in mammals (slope = 0.95) and plants (slope = 0.54). Further, it suggests how these differences relate quantitatively to specific biological processes during recruitment. In these ways, the model generalizes across previous theory and provides explanations for some differences between major taxa.

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18631112     DOI: 10.1086/589889

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Nat        ISSN: 0003-0147            Impact factor:   3.926


  6 in total

1.  The tolerance-fecundity trade-off and the maintenance of diversity in seed size.

Authors:  Helene C Muller-Landau
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-02-16       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Life-history plasticity in female threespine stickleback.

Authors:  J A Baker; M A Wund; D C Heins; R W King; M L Reyes; S A Foster
Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)       Date:  2015-08-19       Impact factor: 3.821

3.  Bet-hedging as an evolutionary game: the trade-off between egg size and number.

Authors:  Mark Rees; C Jessica; E Metcalf; Dylan Z Childs
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2009-12-16       Impact factor: 5.349

4.  Optimal semelparity.

Authors:  James W Vaupel; Trifon I Missov; C Jessica E Metcalf
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-02-19       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Are trait-growth models transferable? Predicting multi-species growth trajectories between ecosystems using plant functional traits.

Authors:  Freya M Thomas; Peter A Vesk
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-05-09       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  The shark-tuna dichotomy: why tuna lay tiny eggs but sharks produce large offspring.

Authors:  Richard M Sibly; Astrid Kodric-Brown; Susan M Luna; James H Brown
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2018-08-15       Impact factor: 2.963

  6 in total

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