5 results on '"Eva M. Keppner"'
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2. Males benefit personally from family life: evidence from a wild burying beetle population
- Author
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Sandra Steiger and Eva M. Keppner
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Consumption (economics) ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Family life ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex pheromone ,Brood care ,Burying beetle ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Reproduction ,education ,Paternal care ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,media_common ,Demography - Abstract
Family life in animals is often considered as beneficial for offspring but costly for parents. However, parents might also profit from remaining aggregated within a family unit, especially if a nutrient-rich resource is used for reproduction. We aimed to reveal the potential personal benefits of breeding within a family environment for male Nicrophorus vespilloides, a species of burying beetles that use small vertebrate cadavers to raise their larvae. We previously hypothesized that males obtain an advantage from remaining with their family, because they themselves can feed from the cadaver. This, in turn, enables them to produce more sex pheromone, thereby making them more attractive to females after leaving their brood. However, whether such personal benefits arise under natural conditions is currently unclear because we have no knowledge of the nutritional condition of wild beetles. If carrion is abundant anyways, feeding from a vertebrate cadaver during breeding might not have a noticeable positive effect on the males’ body condition. In the current study, we caught wild males with a natural feeding history and compared their body mass and attractiveness before and after participating in family life. We show that wild males gain weight during breeding and attract more and larger females afterwards. Our study suggests that access to a highly nutrient-rich meal can be a driver of the evolution of family life and eventually biparental care. Males benefit indirectly from defending the resource and offspring against competitors and benefit personally by a higher chance of mating again after breeding.
- Published
- 2021
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3. Manipulation of parental nutritional condition reveals competition among family members
- Author
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Manfred Ayasse, Eva M. Keppner, and Sandra Steiger
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Offspring ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Competition (biology) ,Sexual conflict ,03 medical and health sciences ,Animals ,Carrion ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common ,Body Weight ,Feeding Behavior ,Brood ,Family life ,Coleoptera ,030104 developmental biology ,Female ,Food Deprivation ,Paternal care ,Demography ,Food competition - Abstract
Parental care is thought to be costly, as it consumes time and energy. Such costs might be reduced in animal parents that raise their young on valuable food sources such as dung or carcasses, as parents are able to invest in self-maintenance by feeding from the same resource. However, this might lower the nutritional value for other family members and, as a consequence, food competition might arise. To promote our understanding of the outcome of such competition, we manipulated the necessity of parents to feed from the resource. Using a full factorial design, we paired food-deprived or well-fed males with food-deprived or well-fed females of burying beetles, which are known to raise their young on vertebrate cadavers. We found that food-deprived parents consumed more of the carrion than those that were well-fed and this had a negative impact on other family members. However, the outcome of the competition depended on the sex of the parents, with females suffering when males fed more and offspring suffering when females fed more. Thus, family life involves selfish elements, as both parents remove resources for the purpose of self-maintenance. However, females show altruistic aspects, as they appear to restrict their food consumption for the benefit of their offspring when paired with a food-deprived male. Interestingly, males extend their stay with the brood when having faced food scarcity prior to reproduction, presumably to replenish their energy reserves. Our study therefore reveals that breeding on shared resources can promote family living, but also results in competition.
- Published
- 2017
4. Beyond Cuticular Hydrocarbons: Chemically Mediated Mate Recognition in the Subsocial Burying Beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides
- Author
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Manfred Ayasse, Johannes Stökl, Madlen A. Prang, Sandra Steiger, Eva M. Keppner, and Katharina C. Engel
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Male ,Entomology ,Zoology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Sexual Behavior, Animal ,biology.animal ,Animals ,Mating ,Sex Attractants ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Larva ,biology ,Ecology ,fungi ,Vertebrate ,General Medicine ,Polar lipids ,biology.organism_classification ,Nicrophorus vespilloides ,Lipid Metabolism ,Lipids ,Hydrocarbons ,Coleoptera ,010602 entomology ,Burying beetle ,Female ,Paternal care - Abstract
Burying beetles have fascinated scientists for centuries due to their elaborate form of biparental care that includes the burial and defense of a vertebrate carcass, as well as the subsequent feeding of the larvae. However, besides extensive research on burying beetles, one fundamental question has yet to be answered: what cues do males use to discriminate between the sexes? Here, we show in the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides that cuticular lipids trigger male mating behavior. Previous chemical analyses have revealed sex differences in cuticular hydrocarbon (CHC) composition; however, in the current study, fractionated-guided bioassay showed that cuticular lipids, other than CHCs, elicit copulation. Chemical analyses of the behaviorally active fraction revealed 17 compounds, mainly aldehydes and fatty acid esters, with small quantitative but no qualitative differences between the sexes. Supplementation of males with hexadecanal, the compound contributing most to the statistical separation of the chemical profiles of males and females, did not trigger copulation attempts by males. Therefore, a possible explanation is that the whole profile of polar lipids mediates sex recognition in N. vespilloides.
- Published
- 2016
5. Influence of climatic factors on the flight activity of the stingless bee Partamona orizabaensis and its competition behavior at food sources
- Author
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Stefan Jarau and Eva M. Keppner
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Competitive Behavior ,Physiology ,Stingless bee ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Climate ,Social behaviour ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Competition (biology) ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Animals ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common ,biology ,Ecology ,Feeding Behavior ,Bees ,biology.organism_classification ,Partamona orizabaensis ,Aggression ,Animal Communication ,010602 entomology ,Trigona fuscipennis ,Flight, Animal ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Adaptation - Abstract
Stingless bees have evolved several ways to share contested resources to ensure the coexistence between different species. Partamona orizabaensis quickly exploits food sources by fast and direct recruitment that does not rely on scent marks deposited on substrates. In this study we show that the flight activity of P. orizabaensis is influenced by weather conditions, with higher activity during periods of colder temperatures, higher relative humidity and even during rainfall. We showed that the outcome of aggression experiments between the non-aggressive species P. orizabaensis and its aggressive competitor Trigona fuscipennis is influenced by the number of bees that arrive early after food source discovery. Therefore, the increased activity during less favorable weather conditions and the fast recruitment of nestmates following the discovery of a food source, as observed for P. orizabaensis, may be adaptations that evolved to coexist even with more aggressive and dominant species of stingless bees, with which P. orizabaensis has to compete for resources.
- Published
- 2016
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