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Parental care liberates juvenile growth : a common-garden test of the evolutionary benefits of care

Title data

Eggert, Anne-Katrin ; Prang, Madlen ; Capodeanu-Nägler, Alexandra ; Takata, Mamoru ; Creighton, J. Curtis ; Hwang, Wenbe ; Sakaluk, Scott K. ; Sikes, Derek S. ; Smith, Ashlee N. ; Suzuki, Seizi ; Trumbo, Stephen T. ; Zywucki, Lena ; Steiger, Sandra:
Parental care liberates juvenile growth : a common-garden test of the evolutionary benefits of care.
In: Evolution. (2025) . - qpaf223.
ISSN 1558-5646
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/evolut/qpaf223

Project information

Project title:
Project's official title
Project's id
Vom fakultativen zum obligaten Familienleben und zurück: ultimate und proximate Ursachen der Variation in der Abhängigkeit von der elterlichen Brutpflege
277139873
Evolution von Familienleben: Kommunikation, Konflikt und Koevolution
389135591
Diversifizierung von Familienleben: Art- und Geschlechtsunterschiede im Brutpflegeverhalten entlang eines Abhängigkeitsgradienten des Nachwuchses von der elterlichen Brutpflege
421285903

Project financing: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Abstract in another language

Effects on juvenile growth have long been considered an important benefit of parental care, but they have rarely been tested empirically. Protection and feeding by parents might accelerate offspring growth by allowing offspring to allocate more resources to growth (resource-allocation hypothesis). Protected young could shift investment away from defensive adaptations towards growth (defensive reallocation) and parental feeding should increase the total amount of assimilated resources (energy intake). Alternatively, rapid growth can be costly due to damage caused by reactive oxygen species, and parental protection might facilitate slower growth to avoid this (costly-acceleration hypothesis). We tested these hypotheses along with the suggestion that egg and adult size are correlated with growth in a common-garden study of 17 species of carrion beetles (Silphinae, a subfamily of the beetle family Staphylinidae). Our results were consistent with the resource-allocation hypothesis but did not support the costly-acceleration hypothesis or the idea that egg or adult size constrain growth. Species that are normally protected by parents grew faster, not slower, than those that are not. This was true even when their parents were removed and could not feed, supporting the concept of defensive reallocation. As expected based on greater energy intake, the young of species with parental feeding grew faster when their parents were present than when they were not. When phylogeny was accounted for, neither egg nor adult size were related to early growth rate.

Further data

Item Type: Article in a journal
Refereed: Yes
Keywords: common garden; evolution of parental care; life-history evolution; Nicrophorus; parental care; subsocial insects; trait evolution
Institutions of the University: Faculties > Faculty of Biology, Chemistry and Earth Sciences > Department of Biology > Chair Animal Ecology II - Evolutionary Animal Ecology > Chair Animal Ecology II - Evolutionary Animal Ecology - Univ.-Prof. Dr. Sandra Steiger
Result of work at the UBT: Yes
DDC Subjects: 500 Science > 590 Animals (Zoology)
Date Deposited: 29 Oct 2025 06:30
Last Modified: 29 Oct 2025 06:30
URI: https://eref.uni-bayreuth.de/id/eprint/95023