Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6260642 Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences 2016 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Predation risk to mothers and fathers influences offspring.•Some results suggest that parents can 'program' their offspring for a high predation environment.•Mechanisms underlying predator-induced parental effects on offspring are unclear.•We need to learn more about interactions between maternal and paternal effects.

Stressors experienced by parents can influence the behavioral development of their offspring. Here, we review recent studies in threespined sticklebacks (a species in which males are the sole providers of parental care) showing that when parents are exposed to an ecologically relevant stressor (predation risk), there are consequences for offspring. For example, female sticklebacks exposed to predation risk produce eggs with higher concentrations of cortisol, a stress hormone, and offspring with altered behavior and physiology. Male sticklebacks exposed to predation risk produce offspring that are less active, smaller, and in poorer condition. The precise mechanisms by which maternal and paternal experiences with predators affect offspring phenotypes are under investigation, and could include steroid hormones, olfactory cues and/or parental behavior. As in other species, some of the consequences of parental exposure to predation risk for offspring in sticklebacks might be adaptive, but depend on the stressor, the reliability of the parental and offspring environments and the evolutionary history of the population.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
Authors
, , ,