| Literature DB >> 26763090 |
Emeline Mourocq1, Pierre Bize2, Sandra Bouwhuis3,4, Russell Bradley5, Anne Charmantier6, Carlos de la Cruz7, Szymon M Drobniak8, Richard H M Espie9, Márton Herényi10,11, Hermann Hötker12, Oliver Krüger13, John Marzluff14, Anders P Møller15, Shinichi Nakagawa16,17, Richard A Phillips18, Andrew N Radford19, Alexandre Roulin20, János Török10, Juliana Valencia21, Martijn van de Pol22,23, Ian G Warkentin24, Isabel S Winney25, Andrew G Wood18, Michael Griesser8.
Abstract
Fitness can be profoundly influenced by the age at first reproduction (AFR), but to date the AFR-fitness relationship only has been investigated intraspecifically. Here, we investigated the relationship between AFR and average lifetime reproductive success (LRS) across 34 bird species. We assessed differences in the deviation of the Optimal AFR (i.e., the species-specific AFR associated with the highest LRS) from the age at sexual maturity, considering potential effects of life history as well as social and ecological factors. Most individuals adopted the species-specific Optimal AFR and both the mean and Optimal AFR of species correlated positively with life span. Interspecific deviations of the Optimal AFR were associated with indices reflecting a change in LRS or survival as a function of AFR: a delayed AFR was beneficial in species where early AFR was associated with a decrease in subsequent survival or reproductive output. Overall, our results suggest that a delayed onset of reproduction beyond maturity is an optimal strategy explained by a long life span and costs of early reproduction. By providing the first empirical confirmations of key predictions of life-history theory across species, this study contributes to a better understanding of life-history evolution.Entities:
Keywords: Age at first reproduction; comparative method; cost of reproduction; family formation theory; life-history theory
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26763090 DOI: 10.1111/evo.12853
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evolution ISSN: 0014-3820 Impact factor: 3.694