Projects per year
Abstract
Socially plastic behaviours are widespread among animals and can have a significant impact on fitness. Here we investigated whether the socially plastic responses of female Drosophila melanogaster can evolve in predictable ways following long term manipulation of adult sex ratio and adult nutrient availability. Previous reports show that female D. melanogaster respond plastically to their same-sex social environment, and lay significantly fewer eggs after mating when previously exposed to other females. In this study, we tested two hypotheses, using females drawn from lines with an evolutionary history of exposure to variation in adult sex ratio (male biased, female biased or equal sex ratio) and adult nutritional environment (high or low quality). The first was that a history of elevated competition in female-biased regimes would select for increased plastic fecundity responses in comparison to females from other lines. The second was that these responses would also be magnified under poor nutritional resource regimes. Neither hypothesis was supported. Instead, we found that plastic fecundity responses were retained in females from all lines, and did not differ significantly across any of them. The lack of differences does not appear to be due to insufficient selection, as we did observe significant evolutionary responses in virgin egg laying patterns according to sex ratio and nutritional regime. The lack of variation in the magnitude of predicted plasticity is consistent with the idea that the costs of maintaining plasticity are low, benefits high, and that plasticity itself can be relatively hard wired.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of Evolutionary Biology |
Early online date | 23 Aug 2024 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 23 Aug 2024 |
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Public goods and socially responsive females
Chapman, T., Bourke, A., Fowler, E. & Yu, D.
Natural Environment Research Council
1/12/20 → 30/11/24
Project: Research
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Poor starts and silver spoons: how diet shapes sex-specific fitness from birth to death.
Chapman, T., Maklakov, A. & Rostant, W.
Natural Environment Research Council
1/04/18 → 31/03/21
Project: Research
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Measure for measure: female responses to the social and sexual environment
Chapman, T., Bretman, A., Gage, M. & Fowler, E.
Natural Environment Research Council
18/09/17 → 17/02/21
Project: Research