Abstract

Nutritional geometry has advanced our understanding of how macronutrients (e.g., proteins and carbohydrates) influence the expression of life history traits and their corresponding trade‐offs. For example, recent work has revealed that reproduction and immune function in male decorated crickets are optimized at very different protein:carbohydrate (P:C) dietary ratios. However, it is unclear how an individual's macronutrient intake interacts with its perceived infection status to determine investment in reproduction or other key life history traits. Here, we employed a fully factorial design in which calling effort and immune function were quantified for male crickets fed either diets previously demonstrated to maximize calling effort (P:C = 1:8) or immune function (P:C = 5:1), and then administered a treatment from a spectrum of increasing infection cue intensity using heat‐killed bacteria. Both diet and a simulated infection threat independently influenced the survival, immunity, and reproductive effort of males. If they called, males increased calling effort at the low infection cue dose, consistent with the terminal investment hypothesis, but interpretation of responses at the higher threat levels was hampered by the differential mortality of males across infection cue and diet treatments. A high protein, low carbohydrate diet severely reduced the health, survival, and overall fitness of male crickets. There was, however, no evidence of an interaction between diet and infection cue dose on calling effort, suggesting that the threshold for terminal investment was not contingent on diet as investigated here.

Highlights

  • Resource availability and acquisition are central to life history investment (Gadgil & Bossert, 1970; Roff, 1992; Stearns, 1992; Williams, 1966)

  • The results of our study show that both macronutrient intake and a simulated infection threat influence the expression of life history traits in decorated crickets, G. sigillatus

  • The two diets used in the current study were deliberately selected because they had been shown previously to either maximize calling effort (P:C = 1:8, high carbohydrate diet) or to maximize immune function, at least with respect to encapsulation ability (P:C = 5:1, high protein diet) (Rapkin et al, 2018), thereby making it more likely that the effects of our immune challenge would

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Resource availability and acquisition are central to life history investment (Gadgil & Bossert, 1970; Roff, 1992; Stearns, 1992; Williams, 1966). Beyond the consequences for trade-offs dictated by the number of total calories consumed, only recently have investigators begun to consider the independent effects of macronutrients (i.e., carbohydrates, protein, and fat) on an individual's life history strategy. This was largely driven by the development of nutritional geometry (Simpson et al, 2017; Simpson & Raubenheimer, 1995), a multidimensional framework for disentangling the effects of energy consumption from those of particular nutrient combinations. Due to the divergent nutritional demands of calling effort and immune function, we predicted that males would exhibit significantly different life history strategies depending on their macronutrient intake, infection cue intensity, or the interaction between these factors. We predicted that males maintained on a diet that maximizes calling effort would terminally invest in calling effort at a lower infection cue dose than males maintained on a diet that maximizes immune function

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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