Thermal conditions during early life influence seasonal maternal strategies in the three-spined stickleback.
Sin-Yeon KimNeil B MetcalfeAlberto da SilvaAlberto VelandoPublished in: BMC ecology (2017)
Our results indicate that conditions experienced by females during juvenile life have a profound effect on life-time maternal reproductive strategies. The temperature-induced changes in maternal strategy may be due to constraints imposed by the higher energetic costs of a warm environment, but it is possible that they allow the offspring to compensate for higher energetic costs and damage when they face the same thermal stress as did their mothers.