Abstract

Reproductive traits and the trade-offs among these traits were examined in two venomous terrestrial elapid snakes, the Australian lowland copperhead, Austrelaps superbus, and the Australian highland copperhead, Austrelaps ramsayi. Sampling was difficult, so gravid females had to be held in captivity for up to several months prior to parturition. Analyses showed that captivity affected the time of parturition and maternal body condition, but it had no apparent effect on offspring traits. The results were corroborated by conducting partial follicular ablations in gravid A. superbus with fully yolked follicles. While these females gave birth earlier than unmanipulated females, offspring size was highly correlated with follicular size at the time of ablation and fell within the size range observed in the other females. This suggests that offspring size is fixed by the time follicles are fully yolked. Among unmanipulated females, reproductive traits were similar in A. superbus and A. ramsayi, but relationships among the traits differed. In the A. superbus sample, the trade-off between litter size and offspring size only became apparent after partial correlations, presumably because spring foraging obscured this relationship. In the A. ramsayi sample, however, the trade-off between litter size and offspring size was very pronounced. At this locality, there was no evidence of spring foraging, and snakes had fully developed follicles before or soon after they emerged from hibernation. This reduces the temporal separation between the times when litter size and offspring size are fixed and may allow greater control over the distribution of resources to offspring as a function of litter size.

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