Effects of maternal care on the lifetime reproductive success of females in a neotropical harvestman.

J Anim Ecol

Programa de Pós-graduação em Ecologia, Instituto de Biologia, CP 6109, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Campinas, 13083-970, São Paulo, Brazil.

Published: September 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • Many studies have not explored the costs and benefits of female egg-guarding behavior in arthropods, especially regarding survival and reproductive success.
  • Field experiments on the harvestman Acutisoma proximum showed that unattended eggs faced significantly higher predation, while females that did not guard their eggs had higher reproductive output and fecundity.
  • Although egg-guarding poses physiological costs for females that could affect their fertility, the presence of the mother is crucial for egg survival, leading to an average lifetime fitness reduction of 73.3% if she chooses not to guard.

Article Abstract

1. Few studies have experimentally quantified the costs and benefits of female egg-guarding behaviour in arthropods under field conditions. Moreover, there is also a lack of studies assessing separately the survival and fecundity costs associated with this behavioural trait. 2. Here we employ field experimental manipulations and capture-mark-recapture methods to identify and quantify the costs and benefits of egg-guarding behaviour for females of the harvestman Acutisoma proximum Mello-Leitão, a maternal species from south-eastern Brazil. 3. In a female removal experiment that lasted 14 days, eggs left unattended under natural conditions survived 75.6% less than guarded eggs, revealing the importance of female presence preventing egg predation. 4. By monitoring females' reproductive success for 2 years, we show that females experimentally prevented from guarding their eggs produced new clutches more frequently and had mean lifetime fecundity 18% higher than that of control guarding females. 5. Regarding survival, our capture-mark-recapture study does not show any difference between the survival rates of females prevented from caring and that of control guarding females. 6. We found that experimentally females prevented from guarding their eggs have a greater probability to produce another clutch (0.41) than females that cared for the offspring (0.34), regardless of their probability of surviving long enough to do that. 7. Our approach isolates the ecological costs of egg-guarding that would affect survival, such as increased risk of predation, and suggests that maternal egg-guarding also constrains fecundity through physiological costs of egg production. 8. Weighting costs and benefits of egg-guarding we demonstrate that the female's decision to desert would imply an average reduction of 73.3% in their lifetime fitness. Despite the verified fecundity costs of egg-guarding, this behaviour increases female fitness due to the crucial importance of female presence aimed to prevent egg predation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2656.2007.01273.xDOI Listing

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