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Larval deposition behaviour and maternal investment of females reflect differential habitat adaptation in a genetically diverging salamander population

机译:雌性的幼虫沉积行为和母性投资反映了遗传多样性sal种群中不同的生境适应性

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Illuminating the ability of individuals to react to different selective forces caused by environmental differences is crucial to understand population divergence and speciation in the context of habitat adaptation. In a common environment experiment performed under standardised laboratory conditions, we examined whether female fire salamanders (Salamandra salamandra) originating from a recently adaptively diverged population displayed behavioural phenotype differences related to larval deposition behaviour. Females of this species typically deposit their larvae in small first-order streams; however, in our study population, females also use temporary ponds. These two habitat types display major ecological differences that strongly influence larval growth and survival. We observed that females differed in larval deposition behaviour and maternal investment. Pond-type females extended larval deposition over an increased time period and tended to exhibit more deposition events compared with stream-type females. Over successive deposition events, the body condition of larvae deposited by stream-type females decreased faster than that of larvae deposited by pond-type females. These differences in larval deposition behaviour may represent a bet-hedging strategy, given that ponds are more constrained in terms of desiccation and food availability than streams. The lengthened deposition period enabled pond-type females to deposit larger larvae towards the end of the deposition period, compared with stream-type females. Although the studied population only diverged recently, we observed significant behavioural differences between differentially adapted females, demonstrating the importance of behavioural differences in habitat adaptation in the context of speciation processes.
机译:阐明个人对环境差异导致的不同选择力做出反应的能力,对于理解生境适应环境下的种群分化和物种形成至关重要。在标准化实验室条件下进行的常见环境实验中,我们检查了源自最近适应性分化的种群的雌火sal(Salamandra salamandra)是否表现出与幼虫沉积行为有关的行为表型差异。该物种的雌性通常将幼虫沉积在小的一阶流中。但是,在我们的研究人群中,雌性也使用临时池塘。这两种生境类型显示出主要的生态差异,这些差异极大地影响了幼虫的生长和生存。我们观察到,雌性在幼虫沉积行为和产妇投资方面有所不同。与流型雌性相比,池塘型雌性在更长的时间内延长了幼虫的沉积,并倾向于表现出更多的沉积事件。在连续的沉积事件中,由流型雌性沉积的幼虫的身体状况下降速度比由池塘型雌性沉积的幼虫的身体状况下降更快。鉴于池塘在干燥和食物供应方面比溪流受到更多限制,因此幼虫沉积行为的这些差异可能代表对冲策略。与流型雌性相比,延长的沉积期使池塘型雌性能够在沉积期结束时沉积更大的幼体。尽管研究的人群最近才出现分歧,但我们观察到适应不同的雌性之间存在显着的行为差异,这表明在物种形成过程中,行为差异在生境适应中的重要性。

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