scholarly journals Egg size variation in a long-lived polyandrous shorebird in the context of senescence and breeding phenology

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luke J Eberhart-Hertel ◽  
Lourenco Falcao Rodrigues ◽  
Johannes Krietsch ◽  
Anne G Eberhart-Hertel ◽  
Medardo Cruz-Lopez ◽  
...  

Anisogamy is a central component of sex role evolution, however, the effect of female-female mating competition on egg size variation in polyandrous species is unclear. Moreover, egg size may also be shaped by age-dependent trade-offs between reproductive investments and somatic maintenance that are responsible for senescence. Here we investigate how mating behaviour and senescence are associated with egg size variation in female snowy plovers (Charadrius nivosus). Snowy plovers are long-lived shorebirds (longevity record: 20 years) that often produce several nests each year, with females either sequentially changing partners between breeding attempts or remaining monogamous between attempts. We examined how age, seasonality, body size, and mating behaviour relate to within- and between-female variation in egg volume using repeated measures collected over a 15-year period. We found no evidence of reproductive senescence in egg volume in snowy plover females. Rather, egg volume, polyandry, and re-nesting were strongly linked to breeding phenology: early breeding females had a higher likelihood of being polyandrous or replacing failed clutches, yet these individuals laid smaller eggs likely due to physiological limitations associated with the early season. Older individuals and local recruits secured the earliest breeding opportunities in the season suggesting that prior experience could give an edge in the female-female competition for mates. Larger females laid the largest eggs, as expected, but there was no relationship between body size and lay date - implying that size may not provide an advantage in female-female competition. Our findings highlight the existence of several direct and indirect constraints on female reproductive investment that likely shape individual variation in lifetime reproductive success. Future research investigating reproductive senescence of wild populations should consider mating system dynamics when examining variation in reproductive investment.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lourenço Falcão Rodrigues ◽  
Anne G. Hertel ◽  
Medardo Cruz López ◽  
Erick González-Medina ◽  
Julia Schroeder ◽  
...  

AbstractIdentifying age-dependent trade-offs between reproductive effort and survival in wild organisms is central for understanding the evolutionary mechanisms of senescence. According to the disposable soma theory, early-life energy investments in reproduction compromise late-life investments in somatic maintenance – leading to senescence. Once thought to only be detectable in captive populations, senescence has recently been documented by several longitudinal studies of wild organisms. However, some reproductive traits that are used to quantify senescence may also be shaped by other age-dependent processes such as mating tactics. For instance, polygamy, which is often positively associated with age, may lead to reduced gamete size due to trade-offs between gamete quantity and quality. Here we investigate how mating behaviour and senescence are associated with reproductive trade-offs of female snowy plovers (Charadrius nivosus). Snowy plovers are long-lived shorebirds (longevity record: 19 years) that produce several nests each year, with females either being polyandrous and sequentially changing partners between breeding attempts or remaining monogamous between attempts. We examined how age, seasonality, and mating tactics affect within-female variation in egg volume using repeated measures collected over a 14-year period. Our results provide clear evidence for senescence in snowy plover females starting at three years of age. Furthermore, females laid smaller eggs in years when they were polyandrous compared to years when they were monogamous, with early- and late-season clutches having the smallest eggs. We suggest that individual female reproductive performance is regulated by flexible mating tactics and age- and season-dependent effects. Our findings highlight the existence of multiple trade-offs for female reproductive investments that likely shape individual variation in lifetime reproductive success. We encourage future research investigating reproductive senescence of wild populations to incorporate age-dependent reproductive investments in light of mating system dynamics.Impact SummaryWhy do organisms senesce at older ages? Life-history theory predicts that early life investments in reproduction compromise future investment opportunities for somatic repair, which leads to senescence. Earlier works assumed that senescence was only observable in captive populations due to the high degree of extrinsic mortality experienced by wild organisms. However, with the expansion of longitudinal studies collecting repeated measures from wild individuals, recent works have identified key insights into the selective processes driving patterns of senescence in nature. Here, we use a 14-year longitudinal mark-recapture dataset of snowy plovers (Charadrius nivosus) breeding in a wild subtropical population in western Mexico to investigate age-dependent trade-offs between female reproductive effort and performance. The snowy plover is a long-lived shorebird characterized by a flexible polyandrous mating system. This rare breeding behaviour represents a unique background for investigating senescence in light of between and within-individual variation in reproductive investment. Our study focused on age-dependent dynamics of egg volume – a convenient measure of a female’s intrinsic reproductive investment, particularly in birds with precocial chicks. We explored age-related correlates of within-female egg volume dynamics while controlling for among-female variation and the confounding effect of trait-dependent (dis)appearance of young (or old) females in the population. Our results show that egg volume expresses an early-life increase followed by a late-life decrease, indicative of reproductive senescence. Furthermore, females tended to lay smaller eggs in years during which they were polyandrous than in years when they were monogamous. Notably, polyandry was not associated with age. As expected, egg volume was highly repeatable within females and clutches. We conclude that age-dependent reproductive effort is an important component driving between- and within-individual variation in reproductive performance of facultatively polygamous species. We encourage future works studying reproductive senescence of wild populations to incorporate age-dependent reproductive investment and mating tactics.


2008 ◽  
Vol 86 (12) ◽  
pp. 1376-1388 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. C. Kiefer ◽  
M. Van Sluys ◽  
C. F.D. Rocha

The tropidurid lizard Tropidurus torquatus (Wied, 1820) has a set of populations inhabiting coastal sand dune habitats (“restinga”) along the eastern Brazilian coast. Despite its wide geographic range, there is no information about geographic variation in reproductive features among its populations. In the present study we compared some reproductive aspects of females in 10 coastal populations of T. torquatus, aiming to evaluate to what extension they vary geographically. The minimum size at maturity was relatively similar to most populations, but mean female body size had a considerable variation. Clutch size of almost all coastal populations of T. torquatus had little variation and was composed predominantly of two eggs. Interpopulational variation in the mean egg volume was relatively wide and strongly influenced by the variation in mean female body size. The data of the present study indicated that females of almost all coastal populations of T. torquatus produce, predominantly, clutches with two eggs and invest more energy in egg size instead of clutch size, probably as a consequence of morphological and environmental factors. The increased reproductive investment in egg size was confirmed by the values obtained for the relative clutch mass, which remained relatively constant along the coastal geographic distribution of T. torquatus.


2017 ◽  
Vol 67 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 239-249 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuleimis T. Martínez-Caballero ◽  
Brian C. Bock ◽  
Isabel Pérez ◽  
Ángela M. Ortega-León ◽  
Vivian P. Páez

Large initial body size and rapid early growth rate are important in many species, both because predation rates decline as individuals grow and because females that attain a larger adult body size are more fecund. To identify possible factors contributing to size and growth rate variation in hatchling green iguanas, we artificially incubated six clutches at three constant temperatures to test for effects of incubation temperature and/or clutch effects on initial size and growth rate. Higher incubation temperatures resulted in significantly shorter incubation periods but did not influence initial body size. There were significant differences among clutches in egg size, and also in initial hatchling body size, even after correcting for differences in egg size among clutches. A subset of hatchlings from each nest was reared in semi-natural conditions for four months, with individuals from the high incubation temperature condition exhibiting the slowest longer-term growth rates. No clutch effects were detected in the growth rate analyses. The observed variation in early growth rate of juvenile iguanas seems to be selectively important and this variation may be due in part to the conditions the eggs experience during incubation, but clutch effects in this study were limited to egg size and initial hatchling body size variation, but were not found for subsequent growth rates.


2000 ◽  
Vol 78 (9) ◽  
pp. 1544-1551 ◽  
Author(s):  
G S McIntyre ◽  
R H Gooding

Egg size is generally regarded as a good predictor of egg quality. However, in phenotypic studies it is difficult to separate the effects of egg-size variation from the effects of the underlying cause of the differences in egg size. We examined the relationships between the size, shape, hatch rate, and biochemical and energy contents of house fly (Musca domestica L.) eggs using two distinct sources of egg-size variation: maternal age and maternal size. By comparing relationships among egg parameters between manipulations we were able to distinguish some maternal effects from pure egg-size effects. Maternal age was negatively correlated with clutch size, egg volume, hatch rate, and lipid content, but was not correlated with protein, carbohydrate, or energy content. Female size did not affect hatch rate or biochemical and energy contents, but was positively correlated with clutch size and egg volume. Partial correlation analyses revealed that egg-size variation due to maternal-age effects was unrelated to hatch rate, but that egg-size variation due to maternal-size effects was weakly negatively correlated with hatch rate. The results suggest that large and small house fly eggs differ primarily in size and that within size classes there is significant variation in other egg parameters. Size is not a useful predictor of egg quality in this system.


The Condor ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 103 (1) ◽  
pp. 195-199 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vanessa R. Anderson ◽  
Ray T. Alisauskas

Abstract We studied the effect of egg volume and body size on swimming speed, endurance, and feeding rate in captive King Eider (Somateria spectabilis) ducklings in the Canadian arctic. Sprint speed, endurance, and feeding rate were positively related to egg size and body size. Large ducklings from large eggs performed better than small ducklings from small eggs. Ducklings that are more capable swimmers and have higher feeding rates may grow more quickly and be more effective at predator evasion. Thus, ducklings from large eggs may have a survival advantage over those from small eggs under conditions where predation and nutrition may constrain survival.


2013 ◽  
Vol 91 (9) ◽  
pp. 640-645 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Ramirez ◽  
M. Garcia-Tarrasón ◽  
L. Rami ◽  
M. Genovart ◽  
L. Jover ◽  
...  

Understanding how resources are allocated to form eggs is crucial to our better understanding of avian reproductive strategies. However, little is currently known about how egg synthesis in wild birds might be constrained by the availability of specific micronutrients. Here, we investigated the potential role of calcium (Ca) in constraining egg synthesis in the Audouin’s Gull (Ichthyaetus audouinii (Payraudeau, 1826)). In particular, we evaluated the relationship between plasma Ca levels (mg/dL) in incubating females (as an indicator of the physiological response of females to increased Ca demand associated with clutch production) and several fitness-related egg traits such as egg size (i.e., egg volume), egg shape, and eggshell thickness from three-egg clutches. Egg size was positively related with incubating female plasma Ca levels, with the slope of this relationship being significantly higher for later-laid eggs. The observational nature of this study and reversed timing precludes causal inferences, but observed relationships supported the constraining role of Ca in egg synthesis and suggested that Ca may also have a role in modulating the intraclutch pattern of egg-size variation typical of this gull species.


Ornis Svecica ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcin Polak

The main aim of this study was to examine how clutch size and season influenced egg size in a population of Marsh Harriers Circus aeruginosus in eastern Poland. The Marsh Harriers nested in small, isolated patches of reed belts surrounding fish ponds. A total of 328 eggs from 70 clutches were measured during four nesting seasons (2005–2008). Average clutch size was 4.69 ± 0.71 eggs and did not vary between years; the modal clutch size was 5 eggs. Mean values of the egg dimensions were: egg length = 48.60 ± 1.78 mm; egg breadth = 38.36 ± 1.13 mm; egg volume = 36.53 ± 2.99 cm3. There was a strong correlation between egg length and egg breadth. The number of eggs in a clutch had no effect on the egg size.


2017 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 425-434
Author(s):  
Priscila Silva Lucas ◽  
Alex Bager

Reproductive traits and the level of parental investment in offspring varies between individuals and species. These are central issues in life history theory and evolutionary biology. Maternal body size plays an important role in reproduction, and we usually observe variable investment in offspring by females. Thus, optimal egg size may not be reached in some populations or species. In this study, we tested if reproductive traits differed between populations of D’Orbigny’s slider in a specific geographical area in Brazil. We evaluated the relationship between reproductive traits to maternal body size and clutch size to egg size to determine possible trade-offs across populations. At the population level, maternal body size and reproductive traits of D’Orbigny’s slider were different even in geographically nearby areas. Maternal body size had a positive effect on clutch size, but not on egg size, except in the Arroio Grande population. Nevertheless, we did not observe a negative correlation between clutch and egg size in any population. Although maternal body size had effects in the different populations explaining most of the variation of clutch size, variation in egg size may be the result of decreased survival chances in unpredictable environments and possibly morphological constraints. The trade-off between egg size and number was not observed and this could be expected if resource availability and reproductive allocation by females vary greatly among individuals.


2008 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 163-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Aquiloni ◽  
Francesca Gherardi

To test whether male body size affects female reproductive investment in the polygamous crayfish Procambarus clarkii , we described mating behaviour of virgin females paired with either small or large males, and analysed the number, size and weight of both eggs and juveniles sired by either types of male. Along with confirming the overt selection by females of larger mates, we found that the size and weight of both the eggs and the juveniles were higher when sired by larger fathers. This suggests that P. clarkii females exert a form of cryptic choice for large males, seemingly adjusting the quantity of egg deutoplasm in function of the mate body size. The question of why females spend time and energy to brood low-fitness offspring is finally raised.


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