A lack of parental care is generally assumed to entail substantial fitness costs for offspring that ultimately select for the maintenance of family life across generations. However, it is unknown whether these costs arise when parental care is facultative, thus questioning their fundamental importance in the early evolution of family life. Here, we investigated the short-term, long-term and transgenerational effects of maternal loss in the European earwig Forficula auricularia, an insect with facultative post-hatching maternal care. We showed that maternal loss did not influence the developmental time and survival rate of juveniles, but surprisingly yielded adults of larger body and forceps size, two traits associated with fitness benefits....
International audience1. Kin competition often reduces-and sometimes entirely negates-the benefits o...
Background: To optimize their resistance against pathogen infection, individuals are expected to fin...
In species that require parental care, each parent can either care for their offspring or leave them...
A lack of parental care is generally assumed to entail substantial fitness costs for offspring that ...
1. Kin competition often reduces – and sometimes entirely negates – the benefits of cooperation amon...
Parental care benefits offspring through maternal effects influencing their development, growth and ...
The evolution of parental care and family group formation critically depends on offspring survival b...
The evolution of family life requires net fitness benefits for offspring, which are commonly assumed...
Insect parental care is extensive and varied, but its life history implications have never been comp...
The parents' phenotype, or the environment they create for their young, can have long-lasting effect...
Background: Oviparous females have three main options to increase their reproductive success: invest...
Maternal effect senescence has attracted much recent scientific interest. However, the age-related e...
International audience1. Kin competition often reduces-and sometimes entirely negates-the benefits o...
Background: To optimize their resistance against pathogen infection, individuals are expected to fin...
In species that require parental care, each parent can either care for their offspring or leave them...
A lack of parental care is generally assumed to entail substantial fitness costs for offspring that ...
1. Kin competition often reduces – and sometimes entirely negates – the benefits of cooperation amon...
Parental care benefits offspring through maternal effects influencing their development, growth and ...
The evolution of parental care and family group formation critically depends on offspring survival b...
The evolution of family life requires net fitness benefits for offspring, which are commonly assumed...
Insect parental care is extensive and varied, but its life history implications have never been comp...
The parents' phenotype, or the environment they create for their young, can have long-lasting effect...
Background: Oviparous females have three main options to increase their reproductive success: invest...
Maternal effect senescence has attracted much recent scientific interest. However, the age-related e...
International audience1. Kin competition often reduces-and sometimes entirely negates-the benefits o...
Background: To optimize their resistance against pathogen infection, individuals are expected to fin...
In species that require parental care, each parent can either care for their offspring or leave them...