Literature DB >> 29570398

Constraints Imposed by a Natural Landscape Override Offspring Fitness Effects to Shape Oviposition Decisions in Wild Forked Fungus Beetles.

Corlett W Wood, Eric W Wice, Jill Del Sol, Sarah Paul, Brian J Sanderson, Edmund D Brodie.   

Abstract

Oviposition site decisions often maximize offspring fitness, but costs constraining choice can cause females to oviposit in poor developmental environments. It is unclear whether these constraints cumulatively outweigh offspring fitness to determine oviposition decisions in wild populations. Understanding how constraints shape oviposition in natural landscapes is a critical step toward revealing how maternal behavior influences fundamental phenomena like the evolution of specialization and the use of sink environments. Here, we used a genetic capture-recapture technique to reconstruct the oviposition decisions of individual females in a natural metapopulation of a beetle (Bolitotherus cornutus) that oviposits on three fungus species. We measured larval fitness-related traits (mass, development time, survival) on each fungus and compared the oviposition preferences of females in laboratory versus field tests. Larval fitness differed substantially among fungi, and females preferred a high-quality (high larval fitness) fungus in laboratory trials. However, females frequently laid eggs on the lowest-quality fungus in the wild. They preferred high-quality fungi when moving between oviposition sites, but this preference disappeared as the distance between sites increased and was inconsistent between study plots. Our results suggest that constraints on oviposition preferences in natural landscapes are sufficiently large to drive oviposition in poor developmental environments even when offspring fitness consequences are severe.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bolitotherus cornutus; capture-recapture; heterogeneous environment; maternal effect; preference-performance

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29570398     DOI: 10.1086/696218

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


  3 in total

1.  The role of maternal effects on offspring performance in familiar and novel environments.

Authors:  Milan Vrtílek; Pierre J C Chuard; Maider Iglesias-Carrasco; Zhuzhi Zhang; Michael D Jennions; Megan L Head
Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)       Date:  2021-04-06       Impact factor: 3.832

2.  Group and individual social network metrics are robust to changes in resource distribution in experimental populations of forked fungus beetles.

Authors:  Robin A Costello; Phoebe A Cook; Vincent A Formica; Edmund D Brodie
Journal:  J Anim Ecol       Date:  2022-03-11       Impact factor: 5.606

3.  Does Divergence in Habitat Breadth Associate with Species Differences in Decision Making in Drosophila Sechellia and Drosophila Simulans?

Authors:  Madeline P Burns; Frederick D Cavallaro; Julia B Saltz
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2020-05-09       Impact factor: 4.096

  3 in total

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