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Long-term fitness effects of the early-life environment in a wild bird population

Yuheng Sun*, Terry A. Burke, Hannah L. Dugdale*, Julia Schroeder

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Environmental conditions and experiences during development can have long-term fitness consequences, including a reduction of adulthood survival and reproduction. These long-term fitness consequences may play an important role in shaping the evolution of life history. We tested two hypotheses on the long-term fitness effects of the developmental environment - the silver spoon hypothesis and the internal predictive adaptive response (PAR) hypothesis. We compared the change in annual survival and annual reproductive output with age for adult birds hatched and/or reared in poor - impacted by anthropogenic noise, and/or high sibling competition - and good - not impacted by anthropogenic noise, and/or low sibling competition - environments. We used a 23-year longitudinal dataset from a wild house sparrow (Passer domesticus) population inhabiting an isolated island, which enabled near-complete monitoring and unusually accurate lifetime fitness estimates. We used a cross-fostering setup to disentangle environmental effects experienced postnatally from those experienced prenatally. We found that adults that, as chicks experienced more within-brood competition had a stronger increase in early-life annual survival, but also a stronger decrease in late-life annual survival. Females that hatched in a noisy environment produced fewer genetic recruits annually, supporting a sex-specific silver spoon hypothesis. Males reared in a noisy environment had accelerated reproductive schedules, supporting a sex-specific internal PAR hypothesis. Our results highlight that anthropogenic noise (∼68 dB from power generators) can have long-term fitness consequences in wild animals, altering their life-history strategies, and that effects may be sex-specific.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberaraf097
Pages (from-to)1-11
Number of pages11
JournalBehavioral Ecology
Volume36
Issue number5
Early online date26 Sept 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2025

Bibliographical note

Copyright the Author(s) 2025. Version archived for private and non-commercial use with the permission of the author/s and according to publisher conditions. For further rights please contact the publisher.

Keywords

  • aging
  • competition
  • noise
  • predictive adaptive response
  • senescence
  • silver spoon

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