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Asynchronous hatching and brood reduction by filial cannibalism in the burying beetle Nicrophorus quadripunctatus
Authors:Mamoru Takata  Satoshi Koyama  Toshiyuki Satoh  Hajime Fugo
Institution:1. United Graduate School of Agricultural Science, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, 3-5-8 Saiwai, Fuchu, Tokyo, Japan
2. Graduate School of Agriculture, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, 3-5-8 Saiwai, Fuchu, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract:Despite decades of intensive research, there is still much debate about the adaptive significance of asynchronous hatching. A major obstacle in understanding the significance of this process is the difficulty involved in separating the hypotheses that explain asynchronous hatching as an adaptive trait from those that explain it as a by-product of physiological constraints on hatching or egg-laying patterns. We investigated the burying beetle Nicrophorus quadripunctatus, a species in which the parent can eliminate less-adaptive offspring (e.g., slower-growing offspring) by filial cannibalism and adjust the age structure of offspring to an adaptive pattern. The main aim of this study was to determine the age composition of offspring that survived and to determine the effect of larval growth on filial cannibalism. We investigated how the point in time at which each group of larvae hatched affects the timing of filial cannibalism by the female parent. We found that N. quadripunctatus exhibited asynchronous hatching, and reared larvae of different ages. We also found that later-hatching larvae had lower survival and growth rates; therefore, filial cannibalism plays a role in eliminating later-arriving, slower-growing, and hence less-adaptive offspring.
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