| Literature DB >> 19557134 |
William C Ratcliff1, Peter Hawthorne, Michael Travisano, R Ford Denison.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stresses like dietary restriction or various toxins increase lifespan in taxa as diverse as yeast, Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila and rats, by triggering physiological responses that also tend to delay reproduction. Food odors can reverse the effects of dietary restriction, showing that key mechanisms respond to information, not just resources. Such environmental cues can predict population trends, not just individual prospects for survival and reproduction. When population size is increasing, each offspring produced earlier makes a larger proportional contribution to the gene pool, but the reverse is true when population size is declining. PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19557134 PMCID: PMC2699099 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0006055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Fitness consequences of reproductive delay during population decline.
An initially rare genotype (FD) that facultatively delays reproduction during a bad year is evolutionarily favored (blue shading) when αS, the increased fecundity of older individuals, reduced by the chance of dying before second-year reproduction, is greater than the overall change (decrease) in population size. This change, (1−δ)FJ, is also the reproductive success of the initially predominant annual genotype (A). This fitness landscape does not change regardless of whether conditions are better next year or not, demonstrating that the fitness benefit of delay is due, not to an increase in fecundity with improved conditions, but rather to an increase in the proportional representation of FD in a shrinking population.