4.5 Article

Trophic-egg production in a subsocial bug: adaptive plasticity in response to resource conditions

Journal

OIKOS
Volume 111, Issue 3, Pages 459-464

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2005.14173.x

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Adomerus triguttulus (Heteroptera: Cydnidae) females provision host Lamium spp. seeds to their nymphs. Females also produce trophic eggs, which are inviable and usually function as a food supply for hatched nymphs. Here we report experimental evidence of the potentially adaptive maternal effects of this unusual resource investment. To investigate the effects of food-resource environments on trophic-egg production, we reared females under different resource conditions prior to oviposition and then compared the subsequent allocations of trophic eggs. Females that had been supplied with less-developed seeds produced fewer viable eggs than those supplied with well-developed seeds. However, there was no difference in the number of trophic eggs produced between the two treatments, and thus the trophic-egg ratio, i.e. the number of trophic eggs per viable egg, was higher in females supplied with less-developed seeds. Trophic-egg feeding by hatched nymphs enhances their growth or survival, and a higher trophic-egg ratio would be adaptive particularly under limited resource conditions. In A. triguttulus, adults and offspring depend on the same food resource, i.e. host seeds, and the resource conditions experienced by females prior to oviposition should be well correlated with those experienced later by the offspring. This may enable females to adjust the trophic-egg ratio in response to varying resource environments prior to oviposition.

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