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Transgenerational plasticity in a zooplankton in response to elevated temperature and parasitism
Transgenerational plasticity in a zooplankton in response to elevated temperature and parasitism
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Transgenerational plasticity in a zooplankton in response to elevated temperature and parasitism
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Transgenerational plasticity in a zooplankton in response to elevated temperature and parasitism
Transgenerational plasticity in a zooplankton in response to elevated temperature and parasitism

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Transgenerational plasticity in a zooplankton in response to elevated temperature and parasitism
Transgenerational plasticity in a zooplankton in response to elevated temperature and parasitism
Journal Article

Transgenerational plasticity in a zooplankton in response to elevated temperature and parasitism

2023
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Overview
Organisms are increasingly facing multiple stressors, which can simultaneously interact to cause unpredictable impacts compared with a single stressor alone. Recent evidence suggests that phenotypic plasticity can allow for rapid responses to altered environments, including biotic and abiotic stressors, both within a generation and across generations (transgenerational plasticity). Parents can potentially “prime” their offspring to better cope with similar stressors or, alternatively, might produce offspring that are less fit because of energetic constraints. At present, it remains unclear exactly how biotic and abiotic stressors jointly mediate the responses of transgenerational plasticity and whether this plasticity is adaptive. Here, we test the effects of biotic and abiotic environmental changes on within‐ and transgenerational plasticity using a Daphnia–Metschnikowia zooplankton‐fungal parasite system. By exposing parents and their offspring consecutively to the single and combined effects of elevated temperature and parasite infection, we showed that transgenerational plasticity induced by temperature and parasite stress influenced host fecundity and lifespan; offsprings of mothers who were exposed to one of the stressors were better able to tolerate elevated temperature, compared with the offspring of mothers who were exposed to neither or both stressors. Yet, the negative effects caused by parasite infection were much stronger, and this greater reduction in host fitness was not mitigated by transgenerational plasticity. We also showed that elevated temperature led to a lower average immune response, and that the relationship between immune response and lifetime fecundity reversed under elevated temperature: the daughters of exposed mothers showed decreased fecundity with increased hemocyte production at ambient temperature but the opposite relationship at elevated temperature. Together, our results highlight the need to address questions at the interface of multiple stressors and transgenerational plasticity and the importance of considering multiple fitness‐associated traits when evaluating the adaptive value of transgenerational plasticity under changing environments. Different environmental stressors, including biotic and abiotic, can interact and cause unpredictable impacts. Yet, it is unclear when transgenerational effects might help or hinder the fitness of the next generation. Our study shows the evidence of stressor‐induced transgenerational plasticity, but its adaptive significance depends on the identity and combinations of environmental stressors.