Nutrients used in reproduction may come from adult feeding or reserves
stored from the juvenile stage. The dynamics of allocation from these
sources are predicted to differ among nutrient types, depending on th
e relative availability of each nutrient type from adult and juvenile
feeding. Using radiotracer techniques, I examined reproductive allocat
ion of glucose and amino acids from adult and juvenile sources in two
nymphalid butterflies, Euphydryas editha and Speyerin mormonia. The sp
ecies used were intermediate in expected importance of adult nutrients
to egg production, with abundant carbohydrates but few nitrogenous co
mpounds available from the adult diet. As predicted, for compounds abu
ndantly available in the adult diet, incoming nutrients were used in p
reference to stored nutrients. For compounds present in low amounts in
the adult diet, juvenile reserves were used throughout adult life, al
though adult sources were used if available. Nutrients received by the
female from the male at mating, although expected to be treated as st
ored reserves, were immediately used in egg production. Thus, restrict
ion of adult or juvenile feeding may cause different nutrient types (e
.g., carbohydrates, nitrogenous compounds) to become limiting to repro
duction. These results are consistent with earlier allocation studies
examining age-specific changes in body mass and reproductive effort, a
nd the effects on fecundity of quantitative adult food reduction. The
work has implications for understanding the evolution of nutrient type
s donated by males to females, the effects of a holometabolous lifesty
le on age-specific fecundity, and the effects of using stored reserves
vs. income in reproduction. The present results allow further predict
ions concerning effects of food supply perturbation on fecundity and,
hence, population dynamics, and suggest ways in which species and indi
viduals will differ in sensitivity to those perturbations.