Stickleback F2 generation transgenerational plasticity experiment: egg and body size data


Autoria(s): Shama, Lisa N S; Wegner, K Mathias
Data(s)

05/09/2014

Resumo

Nongenetic inheritance mechanisms such as transgenerational plasticity (TGP) can buffer populations against rapid environmental change such as ocean warming. Yet, little is known about how long these effects persist and whether they are cumulative over generations. Here, we tested for adaptive TGP in response to simulated ocean warming across parental and grandparental generations of marine sticklebacks. Grandparents were acclimated for two months during reproductive conditioning, whereas parents experienced developmental acclimation, allowing us to compare the fitness consequences of short-term vs. prolonged exposure to elevated temperature across multiple generations. We found that reproductive output of F1 adults was primarily determined by maternal developmental temperature, but carry-over effects from grandparental acclimation environments resulted in cumulative negative effects of elevated temperature on hatching success. In very early stages of growth, F2 offspring reached larger sizes in their respective paternal and grandparental environment down the paternal line, suggesting that other factors than just the paternal genome may be transferred between generations. In later growth stages, maternal and maternal granddam environments strongly influenced offspring body size, but in opposing directions, indicating that the mechanism(s) underlying the transfer of environmental information may have differed between acute and developmental acclimation experienced by the two generations. Taken together, our results suggest that the fitness consequences of parental and grandparental TGP are highly context dependent, but will play an important role in mediating some of the impacts of rapid climate change in this system.

Formato

application/zip, 6 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.835585

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.835585

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Shama, Lisa N S; Wegner, K Mathias (2014): Grandparental effects in marine sticklebacks: transgenerational plasticity across multiple generations. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 27(11), 2297-2307, doi:10.1111/jeb.12490

Palavras-Chave #after 30 days; after 60 days; after 90 days; AWI_Coast; Coastal Ecology @ AWI; dam; full sibling family ID; G. aculeatus accl temp maternal; G. aculeatus accl temp paternal; G. aculeatus egg; G. aculeatus egg d; G. aculeatus hatch; G. aculeatus hatch succ; G. aculeatus sl f; G. aculeatus sl o; Gasterosteus aculeatus; Gasterosteus aculeatus, acclimation temperature, maternal; Gasterosteus aculeatus, acclimation temperature, paternal; Gasterosteus aculeatus, egg, diameter; Gasterosteus aculeatus, hatching success; Gasterosteus aculeatus, number of hatchlings; Gasterosteus aculeatus, standard length, female; Gasterosteus aculeatus, standard length, offspring; Gasterosteus aculeatus eggs; granddam; grandsire; hatchling density in beakers from days 14 to 30; hatchling density in beakers from days 3 to 14; ID; Identification; mean, based on 10 eggs per clutch; offspring density in aquaria on day 60; offspring density in aquaria on day 90; sire; Temperature, rearing; temperature treatment groups that were crossed (male x female); T rear
Tipo

Dataset