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Aging parasites produce offspring with poor fitness prospects.

Cédric LippensBruno FaivreClothilde LechenaultGabriele Sorci
Published in: Biology letters (2017)
Senescing individuals have poor survival prospects and low fecundity. They can also produce offspring with reduced survival and reproductive success. We tested the effect of parental age on the performance of descendants in the nematode Heligmosomoides polygyrus, an intestinal parasite of rodents. We found that offspring of senescing worms had reduced within-host survival and reduced egg shedding over the first month post-infection compared with offspring produced by young parents. These results suggest that declining offspring quality is a component of senescence in parasitic nematodes and might have evolutionary consequences for the optimal schedule of age-dependent investment into reproductive effort.
Keyphrases
  • high fat diet
  • free survival
  • insulin resistance
  • adipose tissue
  • body composition
  • type diabetes
  • gene expression
  • endothelial cells
  • skeletal muscle
  • dna methylation
  • stress induced