Maternal age effects on offspring lifespan and reproduction vary within a species

Author:

Liguori Alyssa12ORCID,Korm Sovannarith1ORCID,Profetto Alex13,Richters Emily14,Gribble Kristin E.1

Affiliation:

1. Josephine Bay Paul Center for Comparative Molecular Biology and Evolution, Marine Biological Laboratory Woods Hole Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Biology State University of New York at New Paltz New Paltz New York USA

3. Translational Genomics Laboratory McLean Hospital Belmont Massachusetts USA

4. Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimer's Disease and the Aging Brain Columbia University New York City New York USA

Abstract

AbstractAcross diverse taxa, offspring from older mothers have decreased lifespan and fitness. Little is known about the extent to which maternal age effects vary among genotypes for a given species, however, except for studies of a few arthropod species. To investigate the presence and degree of intraspecific variability in maternal age effects, we compared lifespan, reproductive schedule, and lifetime reproductive output of offspring produced by young, middle‐aged, and old mothers in four strains of rotifers in the Brachionus plicatilis species complex. We found significant variability among strains in the magnitude and direction of maternal age effects on offspring life history traits. In one strain, offspring of young mothers lived 20% longer than offspring of old mothers, whereas there were no significant effects of maternal age on lifespan for other strains. Depending on strain, advanced maternal age had positive effects, negative effects, or no effect on lifetime reproductive output. Across strains, older mothers produced offspring that had higher maximum daily reproduction early in life. The effects of maternal age on offspring vital rates could not be explained by changes in trade‐offs between lifespan and reproduction. This study documents intraspecific variability in maternal age effects in an additional clade. Investigating intraspecific variability is critical for understanding the ubiquity of maternal age effects and their role in the evolution of life history and aging.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Wiley

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