Sex–biased maternal investment in voles: importance of environmental conditions

Adaptive bias in sex allocation is traditionally proposed to be related to the condition of mothers as well as to the unequal fitness values of produced sexes. A positive relationship between mother condition and investment into male offspring is often predicted. This relationship was also recently...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 2004-07, Vol.271 (1546), p.1385-1391
Hauptverfasser: Koskela, Esa, Huitu, Otso, Koivula, Minna, Korpimäki, Erkki, Mappes, Tapio
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container_issue 1546
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container_title Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences
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creator Koskela, Esa
Huitu, Otso
Koivula, Minna
Korpimäki, Erkki
Mappes, Tapio
description Adaptive bias in sex allocation is traditionally proposed to be related to the condition of mothers as well as to the unequal fitness values of produced sexes. A positive relationship between mother condition and investment into male offspring is often predicted. This relationship was also recently found to depend on environmental conditions. We studied these causalities experimentally using a design where winter food supply was manipulated in eight outdoor-enclosed populations of field voles Microtus agrestis. At the beginning of the breeding season in spring, food-supplemented mothers seemed to be in a similar condition, measured as body mass, head width, body condition index and parasite load (blood parasite Trypanosoma), to non-supplemented mothers. Food supplements affected neither the litter size, the reproductive effort of mothers, nor the litter sex ratios at birth. However, food supplementation significantly increased the birth size of male offspring and improved their condition, as indicated by reduced parasite loads (intestinal Eimeria). Interestingly, mothers in good body condition produced larger male offspring only when environmental conditions were improved by food supplements. Although the adaptiveness of variation in mammalian sex ratios is still questionable, our study indicates that mothers in good condition bias their investment towards male offspring, but only when environmental conditions are favourable.
doi_str_mv 10.1098/rspb.2004.2711
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subjects Analysis of Variance
Animals
Arvicolinae - metabolism
Arvicolinae - parasitology
Arvicolinae - physiology
Body condition
Body Constitution
Body Weights and Measures
Dietary Supplements
Eimeria
Environment
Female
Finland
Food security
Food Supplementation
Food supply
Head
Linear Models
Litter Size
Mammals
Maternal Condition
Maternal-Fetal Exchange - physiology
Mating behavior
Parasitemia - metabolism
Parasites
Pregnancy
Reproduction
Reproduction - physiology
Seasons
Sex Allocation
Sex Factors
Sex Ratio
Trypanosoma
Voles
title Sex–biased maternal investment in voles: importance of environmental conditions
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