Abstract

Many organisms adjust their parental expenditure to offspring in response to resource quality. However, the mechanisms underlying the adjustment in parental expenditure are not well understood. We examined the adjustments in parental expenditure and subsequent offspring performance in two sympatric, closely related dung beetles, Onthophagus ater and O. fodiens, that were provided either monkey, deer, horse, or cow dung. The egg contained within each dung brood mass provisioned by the parent beetles develops to adulthood underground. Thus, the size of the brood mass roughly represents the amount of parental expenditure. The brood mass size differed between the two species and among the four dung types. Results of offspring performance suggested that O. ater parents optimally adjusted the brood mass size in response to dung quality, whereas O. fodiens parents did not. We hypothesized that brood mass size in O. ater may increase with prolonged egg maturation caused by the lower nutrition level of cow dung. In addition, our complex results may be explained in part by the specific threshold concept of dung quality (i.e., water content and nutritional level).

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