Salamander Mating Behaviors and Their Consequences for Individuals and Populations

In this dissertation, I report new information that is necessary for future mating system studies in a little studied species, the marbled salamander (Ambystoma opacum). I studied female mating behavior, sexual selection, and the consequences of polyandry for individual females and salamander popula...

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Main Author: Croshaw, Dean
Format: Others
Published: ScholarWorks@UNO 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/436
http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1457&context=td
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spelling ndltd-uno.edu-oai-scholarworks.uno.edu-td-14572016-10-21T17:04:19Z Salamander Mating Behaviors and Their Consequences for Individuals and Populations Croshaw, Dean In this dissertation, I report new information that is necessary for future mating system studies in a little studied species, the marbled salamander (Ambystoma opacum). I studied female mating behavior, sexual selection, and the consequences of polyandry for individual females and salamander populations. I also compared the performance of several statistical approaches for analyzing genetic mating system data. The first chapter summarizes the characteristics of several novel microsatellite DNA loci as well as cross-amplified loci for marbled salamanders and mole salamanders that may be used for future studies. In the second chapter, I report estimates of sire number for 13 marbled salamander clutches based on microsatellite data from 32 hatchlings per clutch. Females mated with as many as three different males as indicated by conservative techniques. Less than half of females mated with multiple males. Based on comparative analyses, I recommend the parental reconstruction approach with the computer program GERUD for assessing multiple paternity. The third chapter describes an experiment designed to study sexual selection. As expected, in breeding mesocosms, the potential for sexual selection was much higher for males than for females. Size was unrelated to variance in male reproductive fitness. Only opportunity for selection and Morisita’s index conformed to theoretical expectations of the relationship between operational sex ratio and the potential for sexual selection among males. Because opportunity for selection has intuitive links to formal sexual selection theory, I recommend its continued use. In the fourth chapter, I compared polyandrous and monandrous females to explore the potential fitness consequences of multimale mating. No fitness measure at the egg or hatchling stage (clutch size, hatching success, hatchling size, etc.) differed between the two types of clutches. Size of metamorphs was not different, but polyandrous clutches had significantly higher survival to metamorphosis. In the fifth chapter, I analyzed effects of increased polyandry and male availability on genetic diversity, effective population size (Ne), and fitness of experimental populations. Although no analyses were significant, some effects were moderate to high in size. Ne was higher when estimated from hatchlings than with metamorphs. 2006-05-22T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/436 http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1457&context=td University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations ScholarWorks@UNO Polyandry Sexual selection Opportunity for selection Microsatellites Effective population size Analyzing half-sib progeny arrays Marbled salamanders
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Polyandry
Sexual selection
Opportunity for selection
Microsatellites
Effective population size
Analyzing half-sib progeny arrays
Marbled salamanders
spellingShingle Polyandry
Sexual selection
Opportunity for selection
Microsatellites
Effective population size
Analyzing half-sib progeny arrays
Marbled salamanders
Croshaw, Dean
Salamander Mating Behaviors and Their Consequences for Individuals and Populations
description In this dissertation, I report new information that is necessary for future mating system studies in a little studied species, the marbled salamander (Ambystoma opacum). I studied female mating behavior, sexual selection, and the consequences of polyandry for individual females and salamander populations. I also compared the performance of several statistical approaches for analyzing genetic mating system data. The first chapter summarizes the characteristics of several novel microsatellite DNA loci as well as cross-amplified loci for marbled salamanders and mole salamanders that may be used for future studies. In the second chapter, I report estimates of sire number for 13 marbled salamander clutches based on microsatellite data from 32 hatchlings per clutch. Females mated with as many as three different males as indicated by conservative techniques. Less than half of females mated with multiple males. Based on comparative analyses, I recommend the parental reconstruction approach with the computer program GERUD for assessing multiple paternity. The third chapter describes an experiment designed to study sexual selection. As expected, in breeding mesocosms, the potential for sexual selection was much higher for males than for females. Size was unrelated to variance in male reproductive fitness. Only opportunity for selection and Morisita’s index conformed to theoretical expectations of the relationship between operational sex ratio and the potential for sexual selection among males. Because opportunity for selection has intuitive links to formal sexual selection theory, I recommend its continued use. In the fourth chapter, I compared polyandrous and monandrous females to explore the potential fitness consequences of multimale mating. No fitness measure at the egg or hatchling stage (clutch size, hatching success, hatchling size, etc.) differed between the two types of clutches. Size of metamorphs was not different, but polyandrous clutches had significantly higher survival to metamorphosis. In the fifth chapter, I analyzed effects of increased polyandry and male availability on genetic diversity, effective population size (Ne), and fitness of experimental populations. Although no analyses were significant, some effects were moderate to high in size. Ne was higher when estimated from hatchlings than with metamorphs.
author Croshaw, Dean
author_facet Croshaw, Dean
author_sort Croshaw, Dean
title Salamander Mating Behaviors and Their Consequences for Individuals and Populations
title_short Salamander Mating Behaviors and Their Consequences for Individuals and Populations
title_full Salamander Mating Behaviors and Their Consequences for Individuals and Populations
title_fullStr Salamander Mating Behaviors and Their Consequences for Individuals and Populations
title_full_unstemmed Salamander Mating Behaviors and Their Consequences for Individuals and Populations
title_sort salamander mating behaviors and their consequences for individuals and populations
publisher ScholarWorks@UNO
publishDate 2006
url http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/436
http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1457&context=td
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