Abstract Life history theory predicts that organisms allocate resources across physiological processes to maximize fitness. Under this framework, early life adversity (ELA)—which often limits energetic capital—could shape investment in growth and reproduction, as well as trade-offs between them, ultimately contributing to variation in evolutionary fitness. Using long-term demographic, behavioral, and physiological data for 2,100 females from a non-human primate population, we tested whether naturally-occurring ELA influences investment in the competing physiological demands of growth and reproduction. By analyzing ELA, growth, and reproduction in the same individuals, we also assessed whether adversity intensifies trade-offs between life history domains. We found that ELA influenced life history patterns, and was associated with modified growth, delayed reproductive maturity, and small adult body size. Different types of ELA sometimes had distinct reproductive outcomes—e.g., large group size was linked to faster reproductive rates, while low maternal rank predicted slower ones. Adversity also amplified trade-offs between growth and reproduction: small body size was a stronger predictor of delayed and reduced reproductive output in females exposed to ELA, compared to those not exposed. Finally, we examined how traits modified by ELA related to lifetime reproductive success. Across the population, starting reproduction earlier and maintaining a moderate reproductive rate conferred the greatest number of offspring surviving to reproductive maturity. These findings suggest that ELA impacts key life history traits as well as relationships between them, and can constrain individuals from adopting the most optimal reproductive strategy. Significance StatementEarly life adversity (ELA) can have lasting effects on evolutionary fitness (e.g., the number of surviving offspring an animal produces); however, the paths connecting ELA to fitness—for example by influencing growth, reproductive timing or rate, or trade-offs between these processes—remain unclear. Leveraging long-term behavioral, physiological, and demographic data from 2,100 female rhesus macaques, we found that ELA-exposed females exhibited growth and reproductive schedules associated with less-optimal lifetime fitness outcomes. Further, ELA intensified trade-offs between growth and reproduction, suggesting that affected individuals face steeper energetic constraints. Our findings highlight the long-lasting impacts of ELA on traits of evolutionary and biomedical importance in a non-human primate model with relevance to humans.
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This content will become publicly available on June 26, 2026
Adaptation to warm environments with a fast pace of life in a marine predatory snail
Understanding how latitudinal temperature variation shapes local adaptation of life history strategies is crucial for predicting future responses to warming. Contrasting predictive frameworks explain how growth and other life history traits may respond to differing selective pressures across latitude. However, these frameworks have rarely been explored within the context of fluctuating environmental temperatures across longer (i.e., seasonal) time scales experienced in nature. Furthermore, consequences of growth differences for other aspects of fitness, including reproductive output, remain unclear. Here, we conducted a long-term (17-month) simulated reciprocal transplant experiment to examine local adaptation in two populations of the predatory marine snail Urosalpinx cinerea separated by 8.6 degrees latitude (1000 km). We reared F1 offspring under two seasonally fluctuating temperature regimes (warm and cold, simulating field thermal conditions experienced by low and high latitude populations, respectively), quantifying temporal patterns in growth, maturation, and reproductive output. We identified striking divergence in life-history strategies between populations in the warm regime, with offspring from the low latitude population achieving greater growth in their first year, and high reproductive output coupled with reduced growth in their second year. In contrast, the high latitude population grew slower in their first year, but eventually attained larger sizes in their second year, at the expense of reduced reproductive output. Responses were consistent with this in the cold regime, although growth and reproductive output was reduced in both populations. Our data provides support for adaptive divergence across latitude consistent with the Pace-of-Life hypothesis, with the low latitude population selected for a fast-paced life characterized by rapid development and early reproduction. In contrast, the high latitude population exhibited slower growth and delayed maturation. Our results highlight the potential limitations of short-term comparisons of growth without considering processes over longer time scales that may exhibit seasonal temperature variation and ontogenetic shifts in energy allocation and imply a radical reshaping of physiological performance and life history traits across populations under climate change.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2023571
- PAR ID:
- 10652730
- Publisher / Repository:
- bioRxiv
- Date Published:
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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