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26 August 2022 Transgenerational effects of predation stress on prey survival, development, and offspring sex ratio: an experiment on Tyrophagus putrescentiae and predator Neoseiulus cucumeris
Xiaoying Wei, Suqin Shang, Zhi-Qiang Zhang
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Predation stress can induce phenotypic plasticity in the life history traits of prey, especially early-life traits such as developmental time. Most previous transgenerational studies have focused on two generations and showed that the transgenerational effects induced by predation stress were negative on offspring fitness. Changes in sex ratio can also be an expression of transgenerational effects, influenced by many environmental and parental conditions. In this study, by using the prey–predator system of Tyrophagus putrescentiae and Neoseiulus cucumeris, we tested whether immature survival, developmental time, and sex ratio of offspring could be influenced by transgenerational exposure to predation stress. We tested the transgenerational effects of predation pressure on early life traits of the offspring over three generations. The results showed that parental effects interacting with grandparental effects increased the immature survival rates of F3 offspring, and that parental effects combined with offspring effects shortened the development duration of F2 offspring. However, neither grandparental exposure to predation stress nor parental experience had any influence on the sex ratio of offspring over three generations.

Xiaoying Wei, Suqin Shang, and Zhi-Qiang Zhang "Transgenerational effects of predation stress on prey survival, development, and offspring sex ratio: an experiment on Tyrophagus putrescentiae and predator Neoseiulus cucumeris," Systematic and Applied Acarology 27(10), 1878-1887, (26 August 2022). https://doi.org/10.11158/saa.27.10.3
Received: 8 August 2022; Accepted: 23 August 2022; Published: 26 August 2022
KEYWORDS
development
Predation stress
sex ratio
transgenerational effects
Tyrophagus
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