Abstract

Nutrition is a dynamic environmental factor and compensatory growth may help animals handle seasonal fluctuations in their diets. Yet, how the dynamic changes in nutrition affect female reproduction is understudied. We took advantage of a specialist insect herbivore, Narnia femorata Stål (Hemiptera: Coreidae), that feeds and reproduces on cactus across three seasons. We first examined how cactus quality can affect female reproductive success. Then, we investigated the extent to which reproductive success can be improved by a switch in diet quality at adulthood. We placed N. femorata juveniles onto prickly pear cactus pads with early-season (low-quality) or late-season (high-quality) fruit and tracked survivorship and development time. A subset of the females raised on low-quality diets were provided with an improved adult diet to simulate a seasonal change in diet. Adult female survival and egg production were tracked over time. All fitness-related traits were lower for females fed low-quality diets compared with females fed high-quality diets. However, when females had access to an improved adult diet, egg production was partially rescued. These findings show that a seasonal improvement in diet can enhance reproduction, but juvenile nutrition still has lasting effects that females cannot overcome.

Highlights

  • Poor nutrition in early life stages can have strong negative effects on fitness-related traits [1–5]

  • While both treatments had a relatively high probability of survival, probably a reflection of good conditions prior to treatment in the 4th instar, we found that the juveniles that were raised on late-season fruit were more likely to survive from the 4th instar to adulthood than those raised on early-season fruit (GLM, χ2 = 9.364, d.f. = 1, p = 0.002; figure 2a)

  • We used wild host plant diets to examine the effects that a seasonal shift in nutrition quality had on female reproductive success

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Summary

Introduction

Poor nutrition in early life stages can have strong negative effects on fitness-related traits [1–5]. The studies that have teased apart the effects of nutrition at different life stages on female reproductive traits have done so through the use of artificial [8,9] or partially artificial [6] diets. While these studies have been quite valuable, the relevance of responses to poor early life conditions under natural food conditions is still unclear. Selection should favour recovery of all fitness-related traits from a poor early nutritional start when fed higher quality diets at adulthood. This pattern may only become apparent if fed the foods they consume in nature

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