Maternal care, mother–offspring aggregation and age‐dependent coadaptation in the European earwig

Benefits and costs of parental care are expected to change with offspring development and lead to age‐dependent coadaptation expressed as phenotypic (behavioural) matches between offspring age and parental reproductive stage. Parents and offspring interact repeatedly over time for the provision of p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of evolutionary biology 2013-09, Vol.26 (9), p.1903-1911
Hauptverfasser: Gomez, Y, Kolliker, M
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container_end_page 1911
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1903
container_title Journal of evolutionary biology
container_volume 26
creator Gomez, Y
Kolliker, M
description Benefits and costs of parental care are expected to change with offspring development and lead to age‐dependent coadaptation expressed as phenotypic (behavioural) matches between offspring age and parental reproductive stage. Parents and offspring interact repeatedly over time for the provision of parental care. Their behaviours should be accordingly adjusted to each other dynamically and adaptively, and the phenotypic match between offspring age and parental stage should stabilize the repeated behavioural interactions. In the European earwig (Forficula auricularia), maternal care is beneficial for offspring survival, but not vital, allowing us to investigate the extent to which the stability of mother–offspring aggregation is shaped by age‐dependent coadaptation. In this study, we experimentally cross‐fostered nymphs of different age classes (younger or older) between females in early or late reproductive stage to disrupt age‐dependent coadaptation, thereby generating female–nymph dyads that were phenotypically matched or mismatched. The results revealed a higher stability in aggregation during the first larval instar when care is most intense, a steeper decline in aggregation tendency over developmental time and a reduced developmental rate in matched compared with mismatched families. Furthermore, nymph survival was positively correlated with female–nymph aggregation stability during the early stages when maternal care is most prevalent. These results support the hypothesis that age‐related phenotypically plastic coadaptation affects family dynamics and offspring developmental rate.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/jeb.12184
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source Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adaptation, Biological - genetics
Adaptation, Biological - physiology
Age
Age Factors
age structure
Animal reproduction
Animals
Behavior, Animal - physiology
Body Weights and Measures
correlation
European earwigs
Female
females
Forficula auricularia
Genetic Fitness - genetics
Insecta - genetics
Insecta - physiology
Insects
instars
larvae
Linear Models
Maternal Behavior - physiology
Nymph - physiology
nymphs
parental care
parents
parent–offspring coadaptation
progeny
Social Behavior
stable parent–offspring interactions
title Maternal care, mother–offspring aggregation and age‐dependent coadaptation in the European earwig
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