# Maternal age and density shape offspring foraging strategies in a predatory mite

**Authors:** Keshi Zhang, Peter Schausberger, Zhi-Qiang Zhang

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/beheco/arag018 · Behavioral Ecology · 2026-02-17

## TL;DR

Older or crowded mother mites produce offspring that hunt more cautiously, which may help them survive in tough conditions.

## Contribution

The study reveals how maternal age and density influence offspring foraging strategies in predatory mites.

## Key findings

- Offspring of older mothers consumed less prey and had lower predation rates.
- High-density mothers produced offspring with better survival under low prey availability.
- Maternal density partially influenced age-related effects on offspring behavior.

## Abstract

Maternal effects are key drivers of offspring phenotypic plasticity, influencing traits such as survival, growth, and behavior. Maternal age at oviposition is an intrinsic factor governing such effects, which often exerts negative impacts on offspring traits. However, in the thelytokous predatory mite Amblyseius herbicolus, offspring of older mothers exhibit increased growth efficiency and reduced prey consumption. The proximate mechanisms of this inverse Lansing effect remain elusive, but this conservative offspring’ foraging strategy may reflect an anticipatory maternal response to mitigate intraspecific competition among later-produced offspring. Here, we investigated how maternal age at oviposition and maternal rearing density influence offspring foraging strategies. Eggs (ie offspring) were collected from mothers maintained under low- and high-density conditions and classified as Young or Old based on maternal age at oviposition. Offspring were then assessed for immature survival under low prey availability, prey consumption, predation incidence, latency to attack prey, and superfluous killing. Offspring of older mothers showed reduced prey consumption and lower predation incidence, whereas offspring of high-density mothers had higher survival under prey limitation. Maternal density partially modulated age-related effects. Our findings highlight the role of maternal effects in shaping adaptive foraging strategies and demonstrate that maternal influences can induce risk-averse behavioral changes in response to ecological conditions. Both intrinsic and extrinsic maternal factors shape offspring behavioral strategies, and maternal age, in particular, can serve as a dynamic source of variation influencing predator–prey interactions and population dynamics.

Parents' experiences shape how their offspring behave. In a laboratory study, we found that mother mites' age and crowded living conditions influenced how their young hunted and ate prey. Offspring of older or crowded mothers were more cautious hunters. These results show that a mother's experiences can directly shape her offspring's behaviour, potentially helping them cope with changing environments.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Amblyseius herbicolus (taxon 1209656)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Amblyseius herbicolus (species) [taxon 1209656]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

61 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13017719/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13017719