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      <ref-type name="Journal Article">17</ref-type>
      <contributors>
        <authors>
          <author>Abdul waheed Solangi</author>
          <author>Yunxia Cheng</author>
          <author>Lei Zhang</author>
          <author>Xingfu Jiang</author>
        </authors>
      </contributors>
      <titles>
        <title>CROSS-GENERATIONAL PLASTICITY: PARENTAL ENVIRONMENT MODULATES OFFSPRING FITNESS EVIDENCE FROM LIFE-HISTORY TRADE-OFFS IN  Mythimna separata (WALKER)</title>
        <secondary-title>Journal of Animal and Plant Sciences</secondary-title>
        <alt-title>JAPS</alt-title>
      </titles>
      <dates><year>2026</year><pub-dates><date>2026</date></pub-dates></dates>
      <volume>36</volume>
      <number>5</number>
      <isbn>1018-7081</isbn>
      <electronic-resource-num>https://doi.org/10.36899/JAPS.2026.5.0102</electronic-resource-num>
      <abstract>&lt;p class=&quot;MsoNormal&quot; style=&quot;text-align: justify; line-height: normal; direction: ltr; unicode-bidi: embed; margin: 12.0pt 0in 0in 0in;&quot;&gt;&lt;span style=&quot;font-size: 12.0pt; font-family: &apos;Times New Roman&apos;,serif; mso-bidi-font-family: T; color: black; mso-themecolor: text1;&quot;&gt;Cross-generational plasticity, defined as non-genetic parental influences on offspring life history traits, represents a critical but underexplored mechanism in insects&amp;rsquo; life-history adaptation. Current study was conducted to investigate how parental temperature (T&lt;sub&gt;P&lt;/sub&gt;), offspring developmental temperature (T&lt;sub&gt;D&lt;/sub&gt;), and offspring adult temperature (T&lt;sub&gt;A&lt;/sub&gt;) interact to influence the offsprings performance in &lt;em&gt;Mythimna separata&lt;/em&gt;. Offsprings from low-T&lt;sub&gt;P&lt;/sub&gt; parents showed slower development at low T&lt;sub&gt;D&lt;/sub&gt;, longer pre-oviposition periods, and the highest (331.92&amp;plusmn;8.04 mg) pupal mass compared with offsprings from high-T&lt;sub&gt;P&lt;/sub&gt; parents 261.11&amp;plusmn;9.6 mg with significant differences (P&amp;le;.0.001). Furthermore, females whose parents were reared at low temperature were heavier, more fecund and had weaker flight abilities than females whose parents were reared at high temperature indicating a trade-off between reproductive investment and dispersal ability with significant differences (P&amp;le;0.001). In contrast, progeny from warm parental environments developed more rapidly, matured earlier, and exhibited stronger flight performance with less fecundity. Low T&lt;sub&gt;A&lt;/sub&gt; consistently constrained fecundity and weaker flight ability across treatments, highlighting the importance of within-generation effects of low temperature. Overall, findings revealed that cooler environments favor phenotypes with delayed development (64.98 &amp;plusmn; 6.58 Days), higher fecundity (556.96 &amp;plusmn; 23.58), and weaker dispersal capacity, whereas warmer conditions promote faster development (30.88 &amp;plusmn; 5.36 days), enhanced dispersal, but lower (410 &amp;plusmn; 31.56 eggs) reproductive output with significant differences (P&amp;le;0.002). These results suggest that cross-generational plasticity mediates adaptive trade-offs between reproduction and dispersal, thereby determining population dynamics and migratory potential. By aligning offspring traits to the thermal conditions experienced by parents, cross-generational temperature effects can strengthen pest survival in changing climates. &lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</abstract>
      <keywords><keyword>Cross generational effects, offspring, temperature, life history traits, flight performance.</keyword></keywords>
      <publisher>Pakistan Agricultural Scientists Forum</publisher>
      <urls><related-urls><url>https://thejaps.org.pk/AbstractView.aspx?mid=2025-JAPS-984</url></related-urls></urls>
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