| Literature DB >> 31183124 |
A M Edwards1,2, E Z Cameron2,3, E Wapstra1, J McEvoy1.
Abstract
Climate change increases environmental fluctuations which thereby impact population demography. Species with temperature-dependent sex determination may experience more extreme sex ratio skews, but this has not been considered in species with chromosomally determined sex. However, anticipatory maternal effects cause lifelong physiological changes impacting sex ratios. Here we show, in mice, that more sons were born to mothers in good condition when their breeding environment matched their gestational environment, consistent with theoretical predictions, but mothers in mismatched environments have no condition-sex ratio relationship. Thus, the predicted effect of condition on sex ratio was obscured by maternal effects when the environment changed. This may explain extreme sex ratio skews in reintroduced or translocated populations, and sex ratio skews may become more common and less predictable with accelerating environmental change.Entities:
Keywords: Trivers–Willard; mice; offspring; sex ratio
Year: 2019 PMID: 31183124 PMCID: PMC6502394 DOI: 10.1098/rsos.181885
Source DB: PubMed Journal: R Soc Open Sci ISSN: 2054-5703 Impact factor: 2.963
The list of variables from laboratory mice collected to determine the influence on sex allocation in females with matching and mismatching pre- and post-natal environments. Body measurements were taken at seven weeks old.
| variable | description |
|---|---|
| anogenital distance | the distance between the anus and the genital opening, measured using digital callipers. An indicator of prenatal androgen exposure [ |
| blood glucose | blood was collected via tail tipping, glucose levels were measured using an Accu-Chek Performa Nano glucometer |
| body condition | calculated from the residuals of an ordinary least-squares linear regression of body mass and pes length [ |
| digit ratio | digit ratio was calculated as the ratio of second to fourth digit on the hind right foot. Digit length is measured using digital callipers from the tip of the toe to the start of the footpad. Observers were blind to the treatment of the animal. A biomarker for prenatal sex steroid exposure [ |
| sibling sex ratio | the sex ratio of the litter from which the focal female was taken |
Figure 1.The experimental design of a sex allocation study investigating whether maternal effects influence a female's ability to respond to environmental pressure. The sample sizes at each stage of the experiment are listed.
Figure 2.The offspring sex ratios from control laboratory mice and those mice whose pre- and post-natal environments match are not significantly different from parity. While those mice whose pre- and post-natal environments do not match have sex ratios that are significantly lower than parity. Note that ‘*’ signifies a significant difference and ‘n.s.’ signifies a non-significant difference from the expected 50 : 50 ratio. The dotted line indicates the expected 50 : 50 ratio.
Figure 3.The offspring sex ratios from mice whose pre- and post-natal environments match shows a strong positive relationship with body condition, while those with mismatching pre- and post-natal environments do not show any relationship with body condition. Full circles and solid line depict matching environments, open circles and dashed line depict mismatching environments.