Context-dependent effects of developmental and adult diet on life-history traits in Drosophila melanogaster.

IF 2.1 3区 生物学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Mohankumar Chandrakanth, Nishant Kumar, Chand Sura, Sudipta Tung
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Abstract

Life-history traits such as body size, reproduction, survival, and stress resistance are fundamental to an organism's fitness and are highly influenced by nutritional environments across life stages. In this study, we employed a full factorial experimental design to investigate the effects of isocaloric diets (diets with equal caloric content but differing macronutrient composition) on key life-history traits in an outbred Drosophila melanogaster population. Our results demonstrated significant diet-induced plasticity, with male wing length (a proxy for body size) being influenced by the developmental diet; males reared on carbohydrate-rich developmental diets had larger wings as adults. Fertility increased with protein-rich diets at both developmental and adult stages, reaffirming the critical role of dietary protein in enhancing reproductive success. Lifespan exhibited sexually dimorphic responses to diet: carbohydrate-rich developmental diets extended male lifespan, while carbohydrate-rich adult diets reduced lifespan in both sexes. Stress resistance traits, including starvation and desiccation resistance, were unaffected by developmental diets but were influenced by adult diets, with carbohydrate-rich adult diets enhancing survival under both stress conditions in males and females. Importantly, while most traits exhibited additive effects of nutrition across life stages, a marginal interaction for male starvation resistance suggests that developmental and adult diets can interact in a trait- and sex-specific manner. Moreover, associations between dietary effects on life-history traits were context-dependent, driven primarily by adult diets and varying by sex. These findings emphasize the profound role of stage-specific nutritional environments in modulating life-history traits and their correlations, offering valuable insights into how organisms may adapt to changing ecological conditions and highlighting the importance of considering both developmental and adult dietary contexts in evolutionary studies.

发育期和成年期饮食对黑腹果蝇生活史性状的环境依赖效应。
生命史特征,如体型、繁殖、生存和抗逆性,是生物体健康的基础,并受到整个生命阶段营养环境的高度影响。在这项研究中,我们采用全因子实验设计来研究等热量饮食(具有相同热量含量但不同常量营养素组成的饮食)对远交种黑腹果蝇种群关键生活史性状的影响。我们的研究结果显示了显著的饮食诱导的可塑性,雄性翅膀长度(代表身体大小)受到发育饮食的影响;以富含碳水化合物的食物饲养的雄性成年后翅膀更大。在发育和成年阶段,富含蛋白质的饮食增加了繁殖力,重申了饮食中蛋白质在提高繁殖成功率方面的关键作用。寿命对饮食表现出两性二态反应:富含碳水化合物的发育饮食延长了雄性的寿命,而富含碳水化合物的成年饮食缩短了两性的寿命。包括饥饿和干燥抗性在内的抗逆性性状不受发育期饮食的影响,但受到成年饮食的影响,富含碳水化合物的成年饮食提高了雄性和雌性在应激条件下的存活率。重要的是,虽然大多数性状在整个生命阶段都表现出营养的加性效应,但雄性饥饿抗性的边际相互作用表明,发育和成年饮食可以以性状和性别特异性的方式相互作用。此外,饮食对生活史特征的影响与环境有关,主要受成人饮食的影响,并因性别而异。这些发现强调了特定阶段的营养环境在调节生活史特征及其相关性方面的深刻作用,为生物体如何适应不断变化的生态条件提供了有价值的见解,并强调了在进化研究中考虑发育和成人饮食环境的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Journal of Evolutionary Biology 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
4.80%
发文量
152
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: It covers both micro- and macro-evolution of all types of organisms. The aim of the Journal is to integrate perspectives across molecular and microbial evolution, behaviour, genetics, ecology, life histories, development, palaeontology, systematics and morphology.
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