Patterns and fitness consequences of intraclutch variation in egg provisioning in tropical Australian frogs

Dziminski, Martin A., and Alford, Ross A. (2005) Patterns and fitness consequences of intraclutch variation in egg provisioning in tropical Australian frogs. Oecologia, 146 (1). pp. 98-109.

[img]PDF (Published Version) - Repository staff only - Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
399Kb

DOI: 10.1007/s00442-005-0177-2

View at Publisher Website: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-005-017...

Abstract

Intraclutch variation in offspring size should evolve when offspring encounter unpredictable environmental conditions. This form of bet-hedging should maximise the lifetime reproductive success of individuals that engage it. We documented the numbers of eggs and means and variances of yolk volume in 15 frog species that occur in tropical savanna woodland. We experimentally determined the effects of initial yolk volume on larval growth patterns in four species. Intraclutch variation in yolk volume occurred to some degree in all species surveyed. Some species had very low, others had very high, intraclutch variation in yolk volume, but all species in which some clutches were highly variable also produced clutches with low variability. Species that occur in areas where the offspring environment is likely to be unpredictable had elevated levels of intraclutch variation in egg provisioning. There was no trade-off between egg size and number in any species surveyed. Under benign laboratory conditions, tadpoles from eggs with larger yolk volumes hatched at larger sizes, and these size differences persisted through a substantial proportion of the larval stage. This indicates that intraclutch variation in egg size has major offspring and thus parental fitness consequences, and is therefore a functional selection variable. This study provides evidence in support of models which predict that intraclutch variation in offspring provisioning can evolve in organisms that reproduce in unpredictable habitats.

ID Code:6985
Item Type:Article (Refereed Research - C1)
Keywords:bet-hedging; maternal investment; offspring size
FoR Codes:06 BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES > 0608 Zoology > 060808 Invertebrate Biology @ 100%
SEO Codes:97 EXPANDING KNOWLEDGE > 970106 Expanding Knowledge in the Biological Sciences @ 100%
Deposited On:16 Feb 2010 13:45
Last Modified:24 May 2013 01:01
Downloads:Total: 2
Last 12 Months: 0
Statistics:More Statistics
Citation Counts with External Providers:Web of Science: 21

Repository Staff Only: item control page