Offspring of older parents are smaller—but no less bilaterally symmetrical—than offspring of younger parents in the aquatic plant Lemna turionifera

Abstract Offspring quality decreases with parental age in many taxa, with offspring of older parents exhibiting reduced life span, reproductive capacity, and fitness, compared to offspring of younger parents. These “parental age effects,” whose consequences arise in the next generation, can be consi...

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Main Authors: Eric J. Ankutowicz, Robert A. Laird
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018-01-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3697
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spelling doaj-6afca70ab926416c8677e696c4b75a992021-03-02T05:02:16ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582018-01-018167968710.1002/ece3.3697Offspring of older parents are smaller—but no less bilaterally symmetrical—than offspring of younger parents in the aquatic plant Lemna turioniferaEric J. Ankutowicz0Robert A. Laird1Department of Biological Sciences University of Lethbridge Lethbridge AB CanadaDepartment of Biological Sciences University of Lethbridge Lethbridge AB CanadaAbstract Offspring quality decreases with parental age in many taxa, with offspring of older parents exhibiting reduced life span, reproductive capacity, and fitness, compared to offspring of younger parents. These “parental age effects,” whose consequences arise in the next generation, can be considered as manifestations of parental senescence, in addition to the more familiar age‐related declines in parent‐generation survival and reproduction. Parental age effects are important because they may have feedback effects on the evolution of demographic trajectories and longevity. In addition to altering the timing of offspring life‐history milestones, parental age effects can also have a negative impact on offspring size, with offspring of older parents being smaller than offspring of younger parents. Here, we consider the effects of advancing parental age on a different aspect of offspring morphology, body symmetry. In this study, we followed all 403 offspring of 30 parents of a bilaterally symmetrical, clonally reproducing aquatic plant species, Lemna turionifera, to test the hypothesis that successive offspring become less symmetrical as their parent ages, using the “Continuous Symmetry Measure” as an index. Although successive offspring of aging parents older than one week became smaller and smaller, we found scant evidence for any reduction in bilateral symmetry.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3697agingAraceaeasymmetryLemnoideaemirror imageshape analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eric J. Ankutowicz
Robert A. Laird
spellingShingle Eric J. Ankutowicz
Robert A. Laird
Offspring of older parents are smaller—but no less bilaterally symmetrical—than offspring of younger parents in the aquatic plant Lemna turionifera
Ecology and Evolution
aging
Araceae
asymmetry
Lemnoideae
mirror image
shape analysis
author_facet Eric J. Ankutowicz
Robert A. Laird
author_sort Eric J. Ankutowicz
title Offspring of older parents are smaller—but no less bilaterally symmetrical—than offspring of younger parents in the aquatic plant Lemna turionifera
title_short Offspring of older parents are smaller—but no less bilaterally symmetrical—than offspring of younger parents in the aquatic plant Lemna turionifera
title_full Offspring of older parents are smaller—but no less bilaterally symmetrical—than offspring of younger parents in the aquatic plant Lemna turionifera
title_fullStr Offspring of older parents are smaller—but no less bilaterally symmetrical—than offspring of younger parents in the aquatic plant Lemna turionifera
title_full_unstemmed Offspring of older parents are smaller—but no less bilaterally symmetrical—than offspring of younger parents in the aquatic plant Lemna turionifera
title_sort offspring of older parents are smaller—but no less bilaterally symmetrical—than offspring of younger parents in the aquatic plant lemna turionifera
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Abstract Offspring quality decreases with parental age in many taxa, with offspring of older parents exhibiting reduced life span, reproductive capacity, and fitness, compared to offspring of younger parents. These “parental age effects,” whose consequences arise in the next generation, can be considered as manifestations of parental senescence, in addition to the more familiar age‐related declines in parent‐generation survival and reproduction. Parental age effects are important because they may have feedback effects on the evolution of demographic trajectories and longevity. In addition to altering the timing of offspring life‐history milestones, parental age effects can also have a negative impact on offspring size, with offspring of older parents being smaller than offspring of younger parents. Here, we consider the effects of advancing parental age on a different aspect of offspring morphology, body symmetry. In this study, we followed all 403 offspring of 30 parents of a bilaterally symmetrical, clonally reproducing aquatic plant species, Lemna turionifera, to test the hypothesis that successive offspring become less symmetrical as their parent ages, using the “Continuous Symmetry Measure” as an index. Although successive offspring of aging parents older than one week became smaller and smaller, we found scant evidence for any reduction in bilateral symmetry.
topic aging
Araceae
asymmetry
Lemnoideae
mirror image
shape analysis
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3697
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AT robertalaird offspringofolderparentsaresmallerbutnolessbilaterallysymmetricalthanoffspringofyoungerparentsintheaquaticplantlemnaturionifera
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