Maternal diet exerts sex-specific effects on offspring' personalities in predatory mites

母体饮食对捕食性螨虫后代的性格具有性别特异性影响

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Abstract

Animal personalities are characterized by consistent behavior within individuals linked to consistently variable behavior among individuals in a population across time and contexts. Genetic determination, transgenerational effects, and personal experience are major pathways shaping animal personalities. Among these pathways, little attention has been paid to environmental factors in the parental generation affecting offspring personality. Here we tested the effects of the maternal diet on offspring personality in the plant-inhabiting predatory mite Amblyseius swirskii. Mated females and males, whose mothers were fed during egg production on cattail pollen, spider mites, or thrips, were subjected to a battery of 3 to 5 tests each for exploration, activity, and boldness. Movement activity was assessed in the mites' familiar environment. Exploration was quantified by the latency to leave and reach novel sites or objects. Boldness was evaluated by residence in risky and benign sites. On average, offspring from spider mite-fed mothers were the most active and those from pollen-fed mothers were the shiest. Offspring from thrips-fed mothers were more repeatable in activity than offspring from pollen- and spider mite-fed mothers. Consistently little and highly active personalities produced more eggs than flexible types. Only offspring from pollen-fed mothers were repeatable in boldness. Taken together, our study suggests that the maternal diet critically influences both mean behavioral trait expression and behavioral repeatability of offspring. The ability of mothers to respond to short-term diet changes during internal egg formation allows to adaptively adjust the behavior and personalities of daughters and sons within local and regional groups.

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