A test of energetic trade-offs between growth and immune function in watersnakes

被引:0
|
作者
Chelsea A. Korfel
Jeremy D. Chamberlain
Matthew E. Gifford
机构
[1] University of Arkansas at Little Rock,Department of Biology
[2] University of Central Arkansas,Department of Biology
来源
Oecologia | 2015年 / 179卷
关键词
Energy allocation; Ecoimmunology; Wound healing; Life history; Snakes;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Energy budgets explain how organisms allocate energetic intake to accomplish essential processes. A likely life history trade-off occurs between growth and immune response in juvenile organisms, where growth is important to avoid predation or obtain larger prey and immune response is essential to survival in the presence of environmental pathogens. We examined the innate (wound healing) and adaptive (lymphoid tissue, thymus and spleen) components of immune response along with growth in two populations of the diamond-backed watersnake Nerodia rhombifer raised in a common environment. We found that neonate snakes born to females from populations characterized by different predator and prey environments did not differ in energetic intake, but snakes from the population containing large prey grew significantly faster than those from a population containing small prey. Thymus mass, when corrected for body mass, was larger in snakes from the small prey population than in snakes from the large prey population. Additionally, the snakes from the population containing small prey healed significantly faster than those from the population containing large prey. Thus, we detected a negative correlation between growth (over a 4-month period) and wound healing across populations that is suggestive of an energetic trade-off between growth and immune response. The differences observed in growth and immune response among these two populations appear to suggest different energy allocation strategies to maximize fitness in response to differing conditions experienced by snakes in the two populations.
引用
收藏
页码:343 / 351
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Smaller amphipod mothers show stronger trade-offs between offspring size and number
    Glazier, DS
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2000, 3 (02) : 142 - 149
  • [32] To be or not to be? Mating success and survival trade-offs when switching between alternative reproductive tactics
    Cordoba-Aguilar, A.
    Munguia-Steyer, R.
    JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, 2015, 28 (11) : 2119 - 2124
  • [33] To leave or not to leave: survival trade-offs between different migratory strategies in the greater flamingo
    Sanz-Aguilar, Ana
    Bechet, Arnaud
    Germain, Christophe
    Johnson, Alan R.
    Pradel, Roger
    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, 2012, 81 (06) : 1171 - 1182
  • [34] Niche partitioning between close relatives suggests trade-offs between adaptation to local environments and competition
    Peterson, Megan L.
    Rice, Kevin J.
    Sexton, Jason P.
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2013, 3 (03): : 512 - 522
  • [35] Immune and oxidative stress trade-offs in four classes of Ruffs (Philomachus pugnax) with different reproductive strategies
    Lozano, George A.
    Lank, David B.
    Addison, Brianne
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY, 2013, 91 (04) : 212 - 218
  • [36] DNMT3.1 controls trade-offs between growth, reproduction, and life span under starved conditions in Daphnia magna
    Nhan Duc Nguyen
    Matsuura, Tomoaki
    Kato, Yasuhiko
    Watanabe, Hajime
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2021, 11 (01)
  • [37] Do stream mayflies exhibit trade-offs between food acquisition and predator avoidance behaviors?
    Hernandez, Stephanie A.
    Peckarsky, Barbara L.
    FRESHWATER SCIENCE, 2014, 33 (01) : 124 - 133
  • [38] AN EXPERIMENTAL-STUDY OF THE TRADE-OFFS BETWEEN AGE AND SIZE AT MATURITY - EFFECTS OF ENERGY AVAILABILITY
    FORD, NB
    SEIGEL, RA
    FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 1994, 8 (01) : 91 - 96
  • [39] Performance is no proxy for genetic quality: trade-offs between locomotion, attractiveness, and life history in crickets
    Lailvaux, Simon P.
    Hall, Matthew D.
    Brooks, Robert C.
    ECOLOGY, 2010, 91 (05) : 1530 - 1537
  • [40] Linking seedling wood anatomical trade-offs with drought and seedling growth and survival in tropical dry forests
    Gonzalez-Melo, Andres
    Salgado-Negret, Beatriz
    Norden, Natalia
    Gonzalez-M, Roy
    Benavides, Juan Pablo
    Cely, Juan Manuel
    Ferrer, Julio Abad
    Idarraga, Alvaro
    Moreno, Esteban
    Pizano, Camila
    Puentes-Marin, Juliana
    Pulido, Nancy
    Rivera, Katherine
    Rojas-Bautista, Felipe
    Solorzano, Juan Felipe
    Umana, Maria Natalia
    NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2025, 245 (01) : 117 - 129