4.2 Article

Obligate costs of parental care to offspring: egg brooding-induced hypoxia creates smaller, slower and weaker python offspring

Journal

BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
Volume 98, Issue 2, Pages 414-421

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8312.2009.01280.x

Keywords

adaptive significance; Children's python (Antaresia childreni); offspring quality; respiration; snake; trade-off

Funding

  1. NSF [IOS-0543979]
  2. ASU Graduate and Professional Students'Association
  3. ASU Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee [05-792R]

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Python egg brooding typifies parental care because it consists of multiple behaviours that provide for multiple developmental needs. For example, tightly coiling around the eggs benefits embryonic water balance, but periodic female postural adjustments improve embryonic gas exchange. Regardless of these postural adjustments, egg brooding creates a hypoxic intra-clutch environment that constrains embryonic metabolism. We further examined this novel and useful parental care model to determine: (1) any fitness-related costs of egg brooding to offspring; (2) whether any long-term costs are alleviated by postural adjustments. We artificially incubated Children's python (Antaresia childreni) clutches and modulated oxygen partial pressure (PO2) to create three treatments: normoxic (NRM, 20.3 kPa O-2), brooding [BRD, PO2 profile typical of clutch PO2 (PO2clutch) in maternally brooded clutches, 15.8-19.3 kPa O-2] and low (LOW, predicted PO2 profile of maternally brooded PO2clutch if females did not make postural adjustments, 14.4-18.6 kPa O-2). Using various metrics from similar to 12 days pre-hatching to 14 days post-hatching, we demonstrated that NRM offspring were larger, faster and stronger than BRD offspring. As only hatchling heart mass differed between BRD and LOW treatments (LOW > BRD), postural adjustments may not alleviate hypoxia-related costs to embryos. Our results demonstrate that parental care may represent a compromise between competing developmental needs and thus entails obligate costs to the offspring. (C) 2009 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2009, 98, 414-421.

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