Silver-spoon upbringing improves early-life fitness but promotes reproductive ageing in a wild bird

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Abstract

Early-life conditions can have long-lasting effects and organisms that experience a poor start in life are often expected to age at a faster rate. Alternatively, individuals raised in high-quality environments can overinvest in early-reproduction resulting in rapid ageing. Here we use a long-term experimental manipulation of early-life conditions in a natural population of collared flycatchers (Ficedula albicollis), to show that females raised in a low-competition environment (artificially reduced broods) have higher early-life reproduction but lower late-life reproduction than females raised in high-competition environment (artificially increased broods). Reproductive success of high-competition females peaked in late-life, when low-competition females were already in steep reproductive decline and suffered from a higher mortality rate. Our results demonstrate that ‘silver-spoon’ natal conditions increase female early-life performance at the cost of faster reproductive ageing and increased late-life mortality. These findings demonstrate experimentally that natal environment shapes individual variation in reproductive and actuarial ageing in nature.

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Spagopoulou, F., Teplitsky, C., Lind, M. I., Chantepie, S., Gustafsson, L., & Maklakov, A. A. (2020, June 1). Silver-spoon upbringing improves early-life fitness but promotes reproductive ageing in a wild bird. Ecology Letters. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.13501

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