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Reproductive Variation and the Egg Size-Clutch Size Trade-off within and among Populations of Painted Turtles (Chrysemys picta bellii)
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Reproductive Variation and the Egg Size-Clutch Size Trade-off within and among Populations of Painted Turtles (Chrysemys picta bellii)

著者: John W Rowe
版本/格式: 文章 文章 : 英语
刊登在:Oecologia, 1994, vol. 99, no. 1/2, p. 35-44
数据库:JSTOR
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文件类型: 文章
所有的著者/提供者: John W Rowe
ISSN:0029-8549
OCLC号码: 481867760
语言注释: English
注意: Fig. 1. Study localities of four western Nebraska populations of Chrysemys picta bellii (left). Populations of the sandhills (hatched) included Beem Lake (BL; Grant County, N 42° 00) and Swan Lake (SL; Arthur County, N 41°45) and Platte River floodplain populations included Dobbins' Ponds (DP; Logan County, N 41°30) and Hansen's Lake (HL, Lincoln County, N 41°15). Rivers are the North and South Platte Rivers and their confluence, the Platte River. At right, study region (shaded) in Nebraska
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Interpopulation variation in egg size, clutch size and clutch mass was studied 3 years in four populations of painted turtles (Chrysemys picts bellii) from western Nebraska. Body size varied among all populations and was larger in two large (56-110 ha), sandhills lake populations than in two populations in smaller habitats (1.5-3.6 ha) of the Platte River floodplain. Reproductive parameters (egg mass, clutch mass, and clutch size) generally increased with maternal body size within populations. Clutch wet and dry mass varied among populations but largely as a function of maternal body size. Clutch size was largest in the sandhills lake populations, both absolutely and relative to maternal body size. Egg mass was smallest in the sandhills lakes and varied annually in one population. Over all populations, an egg size-clutch size trade-off was detected (a negative correlation between egg mass and clutch size) after statistically removing maternal body size effects. Egg wet mass and clutch size were negatively correlated over all years within the sandhills populations and in some years in three populations. Although egg size varied within populations, egg size and clutch size covaried as expected by optimal offspring size models. Thus, patterns of egg size variation should be interpreted in the context of proximate or adaptive maternal body size and temporal effects. Comparisons among populations suggest that large egg size relative to maternal body size may occur when juvenile growth potential is poor and mean maternal body size is small.

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