Abstract

Viviparity has evolved many times within squamate reptiles, mostly in cool climates, but the selective advantages of uterine retention of eggs remain obscure. Previous analyses have assumed that intrauterine incubation enhances offspring survival because of early hatching or protection of the young in utero. I suggest instead that prolonged uterine retention directly enhances hatchling viability, because eggs incubated at maternal body temperatures produce better hatchlings than do eggs incubated at normal nest temperatures. To test this idea, I incubated eggs of two species of montane scincid lizards from southeastern Australia (Bassiana duperreyi and Nannoscincus maccoyi) under thermal regimes designed to simulate temperatures in nests and maternal oviducts. Hatchling phenotypes were substantially affected by incubation temperatures. The variables affected by incubation at maternal versus nest thermal regimes include the hatchling's morphology (body size, relative tail length), running speed in a labo...

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call