Abstract

The reproductive biology of only a small fraction of Neotropical freshwater fishes has been described, and detailed comparative studies of reproductive life-history variation in the Neotropical ichthyofauna are lacking. Here we describe interspecific variation in reproductive life history for a multi-species assemblage of the electric knifefish genus Brachyhypopomus (Hypopomidae: Gymnotiformes: Ostariophysi) from Amazonian floodplain and terra firme stream systems. During a year-round quantitative sampling program, we collected and measured key life-history traits from 3,410 individuals. Based on oocyte size distributions, and on circannual variation in gonadosomatic indices, hepatosomatic indices, and capture-per-unit-effort abundance of reproductive adults, we concluded that all species exhibit a single protracted annual breeding season during which females spawn fractionally. We found small clusters of post-larval individuals in one floodplain species and one terra firme stream species, but no signs of parental care. From analyses of body size-frequency distributions and otolith growth increments, we concluded that five species in our study area have approximately one-year (annual) semelparous life history with a single reproductive period followed by death, while two species have a two-year iteroparous life history, with breeding in both year-groups. Despite predictions from life-history theory we found no salient correlations between life history strategy (semelparity or iteroparity) and habitat occupancy (floodplain or terra firme stream). In the iteroparous species B. beebei, we documented evidence for reproductive restraint in the first breeding season relative to the second breeding season and argue that this is consistent with age-regulated terminal investment.

Highlights

  • The Neotropical fish fauna is a promising system for exploring life-history evolution

  • Based on size-frequency data pooled for all twelve months of the study (Fig 3), Gaussian functions fitted by Finite mixture model (FMM) revealed unimodal distribution of body sizes in females (Fig 3B) and males (Fig 3C) of four species: B. bennetti, B. sullivani, B. verdii, and B. walteri

  • Some Brachyhypopomus and other gymnotiforms moved into flooded forest to feed in submerged leaf litter along the land-water interface during the early rising-water period, but at high water we found very few gymnotiforms in the flooded forest in comparison to floating meadows in the lakes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Neotropical fish fauna is a promising system for exploring life-history evolution. Fishes in general are amenable to year-round quantitative sampling and exhibit suites of informative life history traits that can be measured from preserved specimens. Neotropical fish assemblages are often represented by multiple closely-related species in adjacent habitats. Reproductive life history strategies in electric fishes by NSF grants DEB-0614334 and DEB-1146374 (and supplements)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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