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Title

The Integrative Life History of Maternal Effects.

Authors

Marks, Jamie R; Lailvaux, Simon P

Abstract

Context-dependent allocation of resources drives trade-offs among fitness-related traits and other phenotypes to which those traits are linked. In addition, the amount and type of acquired resources can also affect the phenotypes of other organisms through indirect genetic effects, as exemplified by the maternal provisioning of offspring. Despite a large literature on maternal effects, we lack a comprehensive understanding of the extent to which mothers might affect the phenotypes of their offspring, as well as the various mechanisms by which they do so, particularly with regard to many functional traits that are key determinants of survival and reproduction. Our goals in this paper are to review the various approaches to measuring and understanding maternal effects and to highlight some promising avenues for integration of maternal effects with some other key areas of evolutionary ecology. We focus especially on nutritional geometry; maternal age; and traits proximate to fitness such as whole-organism performance. Finally, we discuss the logistic and practical limits of quantifying these effects in many animal systems and emphasize the value of integrative approaches in understanding the mechanisms underlying maternal influence on offspring phenotypes.

Subjects

BIOLOGICAL fitness; MATERNAL age; RESOURCE allocation; LIFE history theory; PHENOTYPES

Publication

Integrative & Comparative Biology, 2024, Vol 64, Issue 6, p1623

ISSN

1540-7063

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1093/icb/icae117

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