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Maternal sexual interactions affect offspring survival and ageing
Authors:D. K. Dowling  B. R. Williams  F. Garcia‐Gonzalez
Affiliation:1. School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, , Melbourne, Vic., Australia;2. Do?ana Biological Station, Spanish Research Council CSIC, , Isla de la Cartuja, Seville, Spain;3. Centre for Evolutionary Biology, School of Animal Biology, The University of Western Australia, , Nedlands, WA, Australia
Abstract:In many species, females exposed to increased sexual activity experience reductions in longevity. Here, in Drosophila melanogaster, we report an additional effect on females brought about by sexual interactions, an effect that spans generations. We subjected females to a sexual treatment consisting of different levels of sexual activity and then investigated patterns of mortality in their offspring. We found reduced probabilities of survival, increases in the rate of senescence and a pattern of reduced mean longevities, for offspring produced by mothers that experienced higher levels of sexual interaction. We contend that these effects constitute trans‐generational costs of sexual conflict – the existence or implications of which have rarely been considered previously. Our results indicate that ongoing exposure by mothers to male precopulatory interactions is itself sufficient to drive trans‐generational effects on offspring mortality. Thus, we show that increases in maternal sexual activity can produce trans‐generational effects that permeate through to latter life stages in the offspring. This helps to elucidate the complex interplay between sex and ageing and provides new insights into the dynamics of adaptation under sexual selection.
Keywords:ageing  indirect benefits  indirect costs  life‐history  lifespan  maternal effects  polyandry  sexual conflict  sexual selection  trans‐generational
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