Reproductive senescence and parental effects in an indeterminate grower

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TitreReproductive senescence and parental effects in an indeterminate grower
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuteursDepeux C, Lemaitre J-F, Moreau J, Dechaume-Moncharmont F-X, Laverre T, Pauhlac H, Gaillard J-M, Beltran-Bech S
JournalJOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume33
Pagination1256-1264
Date PublishedSEP
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1010-061X
Mots-clésAgeing, Armadillidium vulgare, clutch size, indeterminate growth, reproductive success
Résumé

Reproductive senescence is the decrease of reproductive performance with increasing age and can potentially include trans-generational effects as the offspring produced by old parents might have a lower fitness than those produced by young parents. This negative effect may be caused either by the age of the father, mother or the interaction between the ages of both parents. Using the common woodlouseArmadillidium vulgare, an indeterminate grower, as a biological model, we tested for the existence of a deleterious effect of parental age on fitness components. Contrary to previous findings reported from vertebrate studies, old parents produced both a higher number and larger offspring than young parents. However, their offspring had lower fitness components (by surviving less, producing a smaller number of clutches or not reproducing at all) than offspring born to young parents. Our findings strongly support the existence of trans-generational senescence in woodlice and contradict the belief that old individuals in indeterminate growers contribute the most to recruitment and correspond thereby to the key life stage for population dynamics. Our work also provides rare evidence that the trans-generational effect of senescence can be stronger than direct reproductive senescence in indeterminate growers.

DOI10.1111/jeb.13667, Early Access Date = {JUL 2020