Abstract

Hard, highly calcified eggshells evolved several independent times during the history of amniotes. Because of phylogenetic conservatism of this trait, lineages in which closely related taxa differ in eggshell structure are rare. Four gekkotan families (Carphodactylidae, Diplodactylidae, Eublepharidae and Pygopodidae) have eggs with soft shells, while their close relatives (Gekkonidae) lay eggs with hard shells. Geckos thus offer a rare opportunity to compare the impact of the emergence of a hard eggshell on the economy of egg architecture. Because a sphere has the smallest surface area of all three-dimensional solids of a given volume, spherical eggs in geckos with hard eggshells reduce calcium investment and should therefore be advantageous. Here, we document that hard-shelled gekkonid eggs are indeed more spherical than those of the other gecko lineages. However, within gekkonids, small species lay more elongated eggs than larger species. We speculate that miniature gekkonid females, which lay larger eggs relative to body size compared with large gekkonids, produce elongate eggs in order to pass the egg through a limited pelvic opening.

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