| Literature DB >> 33158902 |
Lelei Wen1, Zengtao Zhang1, Shichang Zhang1, Fengxiang Liu1, Xiaoguo Jiao2, Daiqin Li3.
Abstract
Prey vary dramatically in quality, and maternal diet is generally assumed to substantially influence offspring survivorship, growth, and reproduction in spiders. Numerous studies that have tested this hypothesis have focused exclusively on parental generation or have considered relatively few fitness components of juvenile offspring. However, maternal diet may have a substantial effect on fitness performance beyond juvenile offspring. Here, we investigated the influence of one-time maternal feeding on multiple offspring fitness components, including the survival rate and growth of juvenile offspring as well as the mating and reproductive success of adult offspring in Hylyphantes graminicola, a sheetweb spider with an extremely short lifespan (∼1 month). We fed field-collected adult female spiders two different diets only once immediately before oviposition: midges (Tendipes sp.) only (MO) or flies (Drosophila melanogaster) only (FO). Juvenile offspring of MO females had significantly higher survival rate, faster growth, and larger male size at maturity than FO offspring. Although maternal diet did not significantly influence mating behavior or fecundity of female offspring overall, those of MO females laid eggs earlier and their eggs also hatched earlier and had a higher hatching rate than those of FO females. Intriguingly, one-time maternal feeding was sufficient to have such an influence on offspring fitness even beyond juvenile offspring in H graminicola This one-time maternal effect may be widespread in other spiders and other invertebrates with a short lifespan.This article has an associated First Person interview with the first author of the paper.Entities:
Keywords: Fitness; Hylyphantes graminicola; Maternal diet; Reproduction; Spider; Survival
Year: 2020 PMID: 33158902 PMCID: PMC7657467 DOI: 10.1242/bio.056846
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Open ISSN: 2046-6390 Impact factor: 2.422
Fig. 1.The survivoship (%) of Kaplan–Meier survival curve of the independent effect of a maternal diet comprising fruit flies only (D. melanogaster, N=126) or midges only (Tendipes sp., N=170) on the survival rate of H. graminicola juvenile offspring (log-rank test: χ2=8.40, d.f.=1, P=0.004).
Linear mixed-effect model showing the effects of maternal diet (midges-only, flies-only) and sex on the juvenile offspring developmental time (day) of
Fig. 2.(A) Boxplots of the developmental duration (d) (midge only: Female spiders were fed once on midges (Tendipes sp.) or fruit flies (D. melanogaster) immediately before oviposition. Offspring juveniles were fed fruit flies.
Linear mixed-effect model showing the effects of maternal diet (midges-only, flies-only) and sex on the carapace width (body size) of offspring at maturity in
Mean (±s.e.) mating latency (duration required for a mating pair to initiate copulation), copulation duration, and number of mating bouts in two maternal diet groups (midges-only, flies-only) of
Fig. 3.Comparison of reproductive parameters of female offspring (A) Propensity to oviposit (MO: N=39; FO: N=75); (B) percentage of hatched first egg sacs (number of first egg sacs that hatched/total number of egg sacs produced; MO: N=35; FO, N=59); (C) egg stage in days (MO: N=28; FO: N=27); (D) pre-oviposition interval in days (MO: N=35; FO: N=59). Asterisks indicate significant differences.
Mean (±s.e.) fecundity, fertility and egg hatching rate for the first egg sac produced by offspring female