Investigating the unaccounted ones: insights on age-dependent reproductive loss in a viviparous fly

Sinead English*, Antoine M G Barreaux, Robert Leyland, Jennifer Lord, John Hargrove, Glyn Vale, Lee Haines

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Most empirical and theoretical studies on reproductive senescence focus on observable attributes of offspring produced, such as size or postnatal survival. While harder to study, an important outcome of reproduction for a breeding individual is whether a viable offspring is produced at all. While prenatal mortality can sometimes be directly observed, this can also be indicated through an increase in the interval between offspring production. Both direct reproductive loss and presumed losses have been found to increase in older females across several species. Here, we study such reproductive loss (or “abortion”) in tsetse, a viviparous and relatively long-lived fly with high maternal allocation. We consider how age-dependent patterns of abortion depend on the developmental stage of offspring and find that, as per previous laboratory studies, older females have higher rates of abortion at the late-larval stage, while egg-stage abortions are high both for very young and older females. We track the reproductive output of individual females and find little evidence that experiencing an abortion is an adaptive strategy to improve future reproductive outcomes. After an abortion, females do not generally take less time to produce their next offspring, these offspring are not larger, and there is no sex bias towards females, the sex with presumed higher fitness returns (being slightly larger and longer-lived than males, and with high insemination rates). Abortion rates are higher for breeding females experiencing stress, measured as nutritional deprivation, which echoes previous work in tsetse and other viviparous species, i.e., humans and baboons. We discuss our results in the context of studies on reproductive loss across taxa and argue that this is an important yet often overlooked reproductive trait which can vary with maternal age and can also depend on environmental stressors.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1057474
JournalFrontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Volume11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 Jun 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work was funded by BBSRC grants BB/P006159/1 and BB/P005888/1. SE was supported by a Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship (DH140236). SACEMA receives core funding from the Department of Science and Innovation, Government of South Africa.

Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to the editors Professors Jean-Michel Gaillard and Jean-Francois Lemaitre for the invitation to contribute an article to this special issue. The authors thank Professors Steve Torr, Matt Keeling, Mike Bonsall, and Kat Rock for discussion.

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2023 English, Barreaux, Leyland, Lord, Hargrove, Vale and Haines.

Keywords

  • offspring quality
  • tsetse
  • pregnancy loss
  • prenatal mortality
  • reproductive senescence

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Investigating the unaccounted ones: insights on age-dependent reproductive loss in a viviparous fly'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this