Hormonally mediated maternal effects, individual strategy and global change

Author:

Meylan Sandrine12,Miles Donald B.34,Clobert Jean4

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire Ecologie-Evolution, CNRS UMR 7625, Université Pierre et Marie Curie-Paris 6, 7 quai Saint Bernard, 75252 Paris cedex 05, France

2. Université Sorbonne Paris IV- IUFM de Paris, 10 Rue Molitor, 75016 Paris, France

3. Department of Biological Sciences, Ohio University, Athens, OH 45701, USA

4. Station d'Ecologie Expérimentale du CNRS à Moulis, USR 2936, 09200 Saint Girons, France

Abstract

A challenge to ecologists and evolutionary biologists is predicting organismal responses to the anticipated changes to global ecosystems through climate change. Most evidence suggests that short-term global change may involve increasing occurrences of extreme events, therefore the immediate response of individuals will be determined by physiological capacities and life-history adaptations to cope with extreme environmental conditions. Here, we consider the role of hormones and maternal effects in determining the persistence of species in altered environments. Hormones, specifically steroids, are critical for patterning the behaviour and morphology of parents and their offspring. Hence, steroids have a pervasive influence on multiple aspects of the offspring phenotype over its lifespan. Stress hormones, e.g. glucocorticoids, modulate and perturb phenotypes both early in development and later into adulthood. Females exposed to abiotic stressors during reproduction may alter the phenotypes by manipulation of hormones to the embryos. Thus, hormone-mediated maternal effects, which generate phenotypic plasticity, may be one avenue for coping with global change. Variation in exposure to hormones during development influences both the propensity to disperse, which alters metapopulation dynamics, and population dynamics, by affecting either recruitment to the population or subsequent life-history characteristics of the offspring. We suggest that hormones may be an informative index to the potential for populations to adapt to changing environments.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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