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Food deprivation exposes sex‐specific trade‐offs between stress tolerance and life span in the copepod Tigriopus californicus

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Abstract Long life is standardly assumed to be associated with high stress tolerance. Previous work shows that the copepod Tigriopus californicus breaks this rule, with longer life span under benign… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Long life is standardly assumed to be associated with high stress tolerance. Previous work shows that the copepod Tigriopus californicus breaks this rule, with longer life span under benign conditions found in males, the sex with lower stress tolerance. Here, we extended this previous work, raising animals from the same families in food‐replete conditions until adulthood and then transferring them to food‐limited conditions until all animals perished. As in previous work, survivorship under food‐replete conditions favored males. However, under food deprivation life span strongly favored females in all crosses. Compared to benign conditions, average life span under nutritional stress was reduced by 47% in males but only 32% in females. Further, the sex‐specific mitonuclear effects previously found under benign conditions were erased under food limited conditions. Results thus demonstrate that sex‐specific life span, including mitonuclear interactions, are highly dependent on nutritional environment.

Keywords: stress tolerance; life span; sex specific; food; life

Journal Title: Ecology and Evolution
Year Published: 2022

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