1. Maternal effects modulate population responses to environmental conditions and so are predicted to play a large role in the responses of organisms to global change. 2. In response to one such aspect of global change, the eutrophication of freshwaters and associated blooms of the toxin-producing cyanobacteria species Microcystis aeruginosa, the rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus produces larger offspring. 3. We hypothesized that rotifers exposed to Microcystis may be adaptively increasing offspring investment and offspring fitness (i.e. the maternal match hypothesis). 4. We explicitly tested the consequences of this differential investment by rearing offspring produced by rotifers reared under Microcystis ...
Maternal effects are widely documented in animals and plants, but not in fungi or other eukaryotes. ...
Maternal effects are widely documented in animals and plants, but not in fungi or other eukaryotes. ...
Maternal effects are widely documented in animals and plants, but not in fungi or other eukaryotes. ...
1. Maternal effects modulate population responses to environmental conditions and so are predicted t...
Anticipatory parental effects modulate population responses to environmental conditions and so are p...
Organisms that regularly encounter stressful environments are expected to use cues to develop an app...
Organisms that regularly encounter stressful environments are expected to use cues to develop an app...
Organisms that regularly encounter stressful environments are expected to use cues to develop an app...
Anthropogenic eutrophication has resulted in shifts in phytoplankton community composition worldwide...
The adaptive benefits of maternal investment into individual offspring (inherited environmental effe...
The adaptive benefits of maternal investment into individual offspring (inherited environmental effe...
The adaptive benefits of maternal investment into individual offspring (inherited environmental effe...
Organisms that regularly encounter stressful environments are expected to use cues to develop an app...
Nutrient limitation of primary producers has repeatedly been shown to negatively affect consumers, d...
Maternal effects are widely documented in animals and plants, but not in fungi or other eukaryotes. ...
Maternal effects are widely documented in animals and plants, but not in fungi or other eukaryotes. ...
Maternal effects are widely documented in animals and plants, but not in fungi or other eukaryotes. ...
Maternal effects are widely documented in animals and plants, but not in fungi or other eukaryotes. ...
1. Maternal effects modulate population responses to environmental conditions and so are predicted t...
Anticipatory parental effects modulate population responses to environmental conditions and so are p...
Organisms that regularly encounter stressful environments are expected to use cues to develop an app...
Organisms that regularly encounter stressful environments are expected to use cues to develop an app...
Organisms that regularly encounter stressful environments are expected to use cues to develop an app...
Anthropogenic eutrophication has resulted in shifts in phytoplankton community composition worldwide...
The adaptive benefits of maternal investment into individual offspring (inherited environmental effe...
The adaptive benefits of maternal investment into individual offspring (inherited environmental effe...
The adaptive benefits of maternal investment into individual offspring (inherited environmental effe...
Organisms that regularly encounter stressful environments are expected to use cues to develop an app...
Nutrient limitation of primary producers has repeatedly been shown to negatively affect consumers, d...
Maternal effects are widely documented in animals and plants, but not in fungi or other eukaryotes. ...
Maternal effects are widely documented in animals and plants, but not in fungi or other eukaryotes. ...
Maternal effects are widely documented in animals and plants, but not in fungi or other eukaryotes. ...
Maternal effects are widely documented in animals and plants, but not in fungi or other eukaryotes. ...