Sex-specific patterns of senescence in Nazca boobies linked to mating system

被引:22
|
作者
Tompkins, Emily M. [1 ]
Anderson, David J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Wake Forest Univ, Dept Biol, Winston Salem, NC 27109 USA
关键词
ageing; diet; disposable soma theory; Galapagos; individual quality; mate rotation; serial monogamy; Sula granti; LONG-LIVED SEABIRD; REPRODUCTIVE SENESCENCE; SULA-GRANTI; ENVIRONMENTAL-CONDITIONS; NATURAL-POPULATIONS; INDIVIDUAL QUALITY; NATAL ORIGIN; WILD; AGE; SURVIVAL;
D O I
10.1111/1365-2656.12944
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
1. Under life-history theories of ageing, increased senescence should follow relatively high reproductive effort. This expectation has rarely been tested against senescence varying between and within the two sexes, although such an-approach may clarify the origins of sex-specific ageing in the context of a given mating system. 2. Nazca boobies (Sula granti; a seabird) practise serial monogamy and biparental care. A male-biased population sex ratio results in earlier and more frequent breeding by females. Based on sex-specific reproductive schedules, females were expected to show faster age-related decline for survival and reproduction. Within each sex, high reproductive effort in early life was expected to reduce late-life performance and accelerate senescence. 3. Longitudinal data were used to (a) evaluate the sex specificity of reproductive and actuarial senescence and then (b) test for early-/late-life fitness trade-offs within each sex. Within-sex analyses inform an interpretation of sex differences in senescence based on costs of reproduction. Analyses incorporated individual heterogeneity in breeding performance and cohort-level differences in early-adult environments. 4. Females showed marginally more intense actuarial senescence and stronger age-related declines for fledging success. The opposite pattern (earlier and faster male senescence) was found for breeding probability. Individual reproductive effort in early life positively predicted late-life reproductive performance in both sexes and thus did not support a causal link between early-reproduction/late-life fitness trade-offs and sex differences in ageing. A high-quality diet in early adulthood reduced late-life survival (females) and accelerated senescence for fledging -success (males). 5. This study documents clear variation in ageing patterns-by sex, early-adult environment and early-adult reproductive effort-with implications for the role mating systems and early-life environments play in determining ageing patterns. Absent evidence for a disposable soma mechanism, patterns of sex differences in senescence may result from age- and condition-dependent mate choice interacting with this population's male-biased sex ratio and mate rotation.
引用
收藏
页码:986 / 1000
页数:15
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