Offspring overcome poor parenting by being better parents.

J Evol Biol

Department of Entomology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, United States.

Published: January 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how parental care impacts the development of burying beetles (Nicrophorus orbicollis) and whether offspring can adapt to poor parenting.
  • While reduced parental care negatively affected traits like development time and body size in the first generation (F1), F1 beetles that experienced poor care provided more feeding to their own offspring (F2).
  • Ultimately, the research suggests that flexible parenting behaviors can mitigate the negative effects of poor developmental environments, limiting their impact to just one generation.

Article Abstract

The evolutionary repercussions of parental effects-the impact of the developmental environment provided by parents on offspring-are often discussed as static effects that can have negative influences on offspring fitness that may even persist across generations. However, individuals are not passive recipients and may mitigate the persistence of parental effects through their behaviour. Here, we tested how the burying beetle, Nicrophorus orbicollis, a species with complex parental care, responded to poor parenting. We cross-fostered young and manipulated the duration of parental care received and measured the impact on traits of both F1 and F2 offspring to experimentally extricate the effect of poor parenting from other parental effects. As expected, reducing parental care negatively affected traits that are ecologically important for burying beetles, including F1 offspring development time and body size. However, F1 parents that received reduced care as larvae spent more time feeding F2 offspring than parents that received full care as larvae. As a result, both the number and mass of F2 offspring were unaffected by the developmental experience of their parents. Our results show that flexible parental care may be able to overcome poor developmental environments and limit negative parental effects to a single generation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jeb/voad005DOI Listing

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