Abstract

BackgroundEgg size and clutch size are key life history traits. During the breeding period, it is possible for females to increase their reproductive output either by increasing the number of eggs if the optimal egg size (OES) is maintained, or by increasing the allocation of energy to each egg. However, the strategies adopted are often influenced by animals’ morphology and environment.MethodsHere, we examined variation in female morphological and reproductive traits, tested for trade-offs between egg size and clutch size, and evaluated the relationship between egg size and female morphology in three populations of Phrynocephalus helioscopus.ResultsFemale body size, egg size, and clutch size were larger in the Yi Ning (YN) and Fu Yun (FY) populations than in the Bei Tun (BT) population (the FY and YN populations laid more, and rounder eggs). Egg size was independent of female body size in two populations (BT and FY), even though both populations had an egg-size/clutch size trade-off. In the YN population, egg size and clutch size were independent, but egg size was correlated with female body size, consistent with the hypothesis of morphological constraint.ConclusionsOur study found geographical variation in body size and reproductive strategies of P. helioscopus. Egg size was correlated with morphology in the larger-bodied females of the YN population, but not in the smaller-bodied females of the BT population, illustrating that constraints on female body size and egg size are not consistent between populations.

Highlights

  • Egg size and clutch size are key life history traits

  • tail base width (TBW) varied among populations, and was smallest in the Yi Ning (YN) and FN populations, which had similar TBWs (YN: 7.20 mm; Bei Tun (BT): 6.93 mm), and the largest in the Fu Yun (FY) population when controlling for snout-vent length (SVL) using ANCOVA (F2,52 = 6.82, P = 0.002, Fig. 3B)

  • Egg size was not correlated with female body size in the BT and FY populations, but egg size-clutch size trade-offs occurred in both populations

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Summary

Introduction

Egg size and clutch size are key life history traits. During the breeding period, it is possible for females to increase their reproductive output either by increasing the number of eggs if the optimal egg size (OES) is maintained, or by increasing the allocation of energy to each egg. When there is less food available, females may face the problem of limited available reproductive resources to invest in eggs This results in a trade-off between (1) the energy allocated to each egg (egg size), and (2) the total number of eggs (clutch size). This negative relationship between egg size and clutch size provides evidence for reproductive trade-offs (Rowe, 1992). For geographically widespread species, local genetic variation, short-term phenotypic plasticity, and the complex interactions between these two, contribute to variation in reproductive output (Brown & Shine, 2007)

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