Mothers modify eggs into shields to protect offspring from parasitism.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Eggs are an immobile, vulnerable stage of development and their success often depends on the oviposition decisions of the mother. Studies show that female animals, and sometimes males, may invest parental resources in order to increase the survival of their offspring. Here, we describe a unique form of parental investment in offspring survival. The seed beetle Mimosestes amicus may lay eggs singly, or may cover eggs with additional egg(s). This egg stacking serves to significantly reduce the mortality of the protected egg from parasitism by the parasitic wasp, Uscana semifumipennis. The smaller top eggs serve only as protective shields; they are inviable, and wasps that develop in them suffer negative fitness consequences. Further, we found egg stacking to be inducible; M. amicus increase the number of stacks they lay when parasitoids are present. However, stacking invokes a cost. When wasps are absent, beetles lay more single eggs, and produce more offspring, highlighting the adaptive value of this extraordinary example of behavioural plasticity in parental investment.
منابع مشابه
Molecular identification of brood-parasitic females reveals an opportunistic reproductive tactic in ruddy ducks.
In many taxa, females lay eggs in the nests of other conspecifics. To determine the conditions under which conspecific brood parasitism develops, it is necessary to identify parasitic offspring and the females who produce them; however, for most systems parasitism can be difficult to observe and most genetic approaches have relatively low resolving power. In this study, we used protein fingerpr...
متن کاملIntraspecific brood parasitism can increase the number of eggs that an individual lays in its own nest.
Intraspecific brood parasitism involves laying eggs in the nest of another individual of the same species without subsequently caring for the eggs or hatchlings. Where individuals lay in their own nest as well as parasitically, previous works predicted that parasitism leads to fewer eggs being laid in an individual's own nest, compared with the equivalent situation without parasitism. This is p...
متن کاملHost-parasite relatedness shown by protein fingerprinting in a brood parasitic bird.
Brood parasitism as an alternative female breeding tactic is particularly common in ducks, where hosts often receive eggs laid by parasitic females of the same species and raise their offspring. Herein, we test several aspects of a kin selection explanation for this phenomenon in goldeneye ducks (Bucephala clangula) by using techniques of egg albumen sampling and statistical bandsharing analysi...
متن کاملFacultative but persistent trans-generational immunity via the mother's eggs in bumblebees
It is widely acknowledged that a mother, and the maternal environment, can have a profound effect on the phenotype of her offspring. For example, immunocompetent vertebrate mothers can pass on immune factors to their otherwise immune naïve offspring. Recently, it has also been demonstrated in invertebrates that maternal contact with pathogens and immune elicitors can have a positive impact on o...
متن کاملRelationship between maternal transfer of immunity and mother fecundity in an insect.
Trans-generational immune priming (TGIP) corresponds to the plastic adjustment of offspring immunity as a result of maternal immune experience. TGIP is expected to improve mother's fitness by improving offspring individual performance in an environment where parasitism becomes more prevalent. However, it was recently demonstrated that maternal transfer of immunity to the offspring is costly for...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Proceedings. Biological sciences
دوره 279 1730 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2012