Evolution of elaborate parental care: phenotypic and genetic correlations between parent and offspring traits.

Behav Ecol

Institute of Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Charlotte Auerbach Road, Edinburgh EH9 3FL , UK.

Published: August 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how complex parental care traits evolve in burying beetles by analyzing relationships between parental and offspring traits using a multivariate quantitative genetic approach.
  • Findings show variations in parental care and offspring characteristics based on the size of breeding carcasses, revealing that larger carcasses lead to less direct parental care but better larval growth.
  • The research suggests that individual quality affects the correlation between traits, indicating different parental traits serve to enhance offspring size or quantity, while the limited genetic variance may slow down evolutionary responses to selection.

Article Abstract

The evolution of elaborate forms of parental care is an important topic in behavioral ecology, yet the factors shaping the evolution of complex suites of parental and offspring traits are poorly understood. Here, we use a multivariate quantitative genetic approach to study phenotypic and genetic correlations between parental and offspring traits in the burying beetle . To this end, we recorded 2 prenatal traits (clutch size and egg size), 2 postnatal parental behaviors (direct care directed toward larvae and indirect care directed toward resource maintenance), 1 offspring behavior (begging), and 2 measures of breeding success (larval dispersal mass and number of dispersing larvae). Females breeding on larger carcasses provided less direct care but produced larger larvae than females breeding on smaller carcasses. Furthermore, there were positive phenotypic correlations between clutch size, direct, and indirect care. Both egg size and direct care were positively correlated with dispersal mass, whereas clutch size was negatively correlated with dispersal mass. Clutch size and number of dispersed larvae showed genetic variance both in terms of differences between populations of origin and significant heritabilities. However, we found no evidence of genetic variance underlying other parental or offspring traits. Our results suggest that correlations between suites of parental traits are driven by variation in individual quality rather than trade-offs, that some parental traits promote offspring growth while others increase the number of offspring produced, and that parental and offspring traits might respond slowly to selection due to low levels of additive genetic variance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5255903PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/beheco/arw129DOI Listing

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