新热带泡沫筑巢蛙(Leptodactylus podicipinus)雌性蝌蚪产卵时的身体状况及其潜在代价

IF 1.3 4区 生物学 Q4 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
J. C. Cuestas Carrillo, D. Santana, C. Prado
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引用次数: 2

摘要

亲代抚育提高了后代的存活率,但对父母来说可能代价高昂,降低了未来的存活率和繁殖能力。后代的出现可能增加被捕食的风险,或减少父母的食物摄入量、交配机会和繁殖率。阿努拉动物表现出多种多样的育儿行为,这为研究育儿的成本和收益提供了机会。在此,我们测量了新热带细趾蛙雌性在蝌蚪发育期间的身体状况。通过比较照顾和不照顾的女性,我们验证了提供照顾的女性身体状况和食物摄入会减少的假设。虽然脂肪体质量没有差异,但在护理6天后,参加治疗的女性的体重、卵巢质量和胃体积明显降低。总的来说,由于父母的照顾,照顾的雌性可能会失去高达40%的体重,而不照顾的雌性则会增加体重。尽管27%的雌性参与者是空腹的,但猎物的多样性更高。此外,水生半纲动物和水生蜘蛛被雌性捕食的比例较高可能与不同的微生境利用和对后代的积极保护有关。我们的研究结果表明,亲代抚育有可能通过减少身体状况和食物摄入量来影响雌性未来的繁殖。研究表明,这对无脊椎动物后代的生存有好处,但很少有人提到父母的成本。通过首次评估蛙类与水生蝌蚪养育后代的潜在成本,我们的研究有助于填补这一空白。对不同蛙系亲代抚育的成本和收益进行研究,将提高我们对这一高度多样化群体中亲代抚育进化的认识。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Body condition of females during tadpole attendance and its potential costs in a Neotropical foam-nesting frog (Leptodactylus podicipinus)
Parental care increases offspring survival, but may be costly for parents, reducing future survival and reproduction. Offspring attendance may increase predation risk, or reduce food intake, mating opportunities, and reproductive rate of parents. Anurans exhibit a great diversity of parental care behaviours and offer an opportunity to investigate the costs and benefits of parenting. Here, we measured the body condition of females of the Neotropical frog Leptodactylus podicipinus during tadpole attendance. By comparing attending and non-attending females, we tested the hypothesis that females providing care will have reduced body condition and food ingestion. Although fat body mass did not differ, attending females had significantly lower body mass, ovary mass, and stomach volume after 6 days of care. Overall, attending females may lose up to 40% of body mass due to parental care, while non-attending females gain mass. Although 27% of attending females had empty stomachs, prey diversity was higher. Additionally, the higher proportion of aquatic hemipterans and spiders preyed on by attending females may be explained by different microhabitat use and active protection of offspring. Our results indicate that parental care has the potential to affect future reproduction of females via reduction in body condition and food intake. Studies have shown the benefits related to offspring survival in anurans, but few addressed the costs to parents. By evaluating the potential costs of parenting in a frog species with aquatic tadpoles for the first time, our study contributes to fill this gap. Studies investigating the costs and benefits of parental care in different lineages of frogs will improve our knowledge on the evolution of parenting in this highly diverse group.
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来源期刊
Ethology Ecology & Evolution
Ethology Ecology & Evolution 生物-动物学
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
44
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Ethology Ecology & Evolution is an international peer reviewed journal which publishes original research and review articles on all aspects of animal behaviour, ecology and evolution. Articles should emphasise the significance of the research for understanding the function, ecology, evolution or genetics of behaviour. Contributions are also sought on aspects of ethology, ecology, evolution and genetics relevant to conservation. Research articles may be in the form of full length papers or short research reports. The Editor encourages the submission of short papers containing critical discussion of current issues in all the above areas. Monograph-length manuscripts on topics of major interest, as well as descriptions of new methods are welcome. A Forum, Letters to Editor and Book Reviews are also included. Special Issues are also occasionally published.
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