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      Linking developmental diet to adult foraging choice inDrosophila melanogaster

      , , ,
      The Journal of Experimental Biology
      The Company of Biologists

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          Sex-specific fitness effects of nutrient intake on reproduction and lifespan.

          Diet affects both lifespan and reproduction [1-9], leading to the prediction that the contrasting reproductive strategies of the sexes should result in sex-specific effects of nutrition on fitness and longevity [6, 10] and favor different patterns of nutrient intake in males and females. However, males and females share most of their genome and intralocus sexual conflict may prevent sex-specific diet optimization. We show that both male and female longevity were maximized on a high-carbohydrate low-protein diet in field crickets Teleogryllus commodus, but male and female lifetime reproductive performances were maximized in markedly different parts of the nutrient intake landscape. Given a choice, crickets exhibited sex-specific dietary preference in the direction that increases reproductive performance, but this sexual dimorphism in preference was incomplete, with both sexes displaced from the optimum diet for lifetime reproduction. Sexes are, therefore, constrained in their ability to reach their sex-specific dietary optima by the shared biology of diet choice. Our data suggest that sex-specific selection has thus far failed fully to resolve intralocus sexual conflict over diet optimization. Such conflict may be an important factor linking nutrition and reproduction to lifespan and aging.
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            Optimal foraging when regulating intake of multiple nutrients

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              The Nature of Nutrition

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Journal of Experimental Biology
                J Exp Biol
                The Company of Biologists
                0022-0949
                1477-9145
                May 11 2018
                May 01 2018
                May 01 2018
                April 17 2018
                : 221
                : 9
                : jeb175554
                Article
                10.1242/jeb.175554
                29666197
                56098c30-bbc6-496e-9723-9c26f755cd44
                © 2018

                http://www.biologists.com/user-licence-1-1/

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