Dispersal as a source of variation in age-specific reproductive strategies in a wild population of lizards

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Abstract

Dispersal syndromes describe the patterns of covariation of morphological, behavioural, and life-history traits associated with dispersal. Studying dispersal syndromes is critical to understanding the demographic and genetic consequences of movements. Among studies describing the association of lifehistory traitswithdispersal, there is anecdotal evidence suggestingthatdispersal syndromes can vary with age. Recent theory also suggests that dispersive and philopatric individuals might have different age-specific reproductive efforts. In a wild population of the common lizard (Zootoca vivipara), we investigated whether dispersive and philopatric individuals have different age-specific reproductive effort, survival, offspring body condition, and offspring sex ratio. Consistent with theoretical predictions,we found that young dispersive females have a higher reproductive effort than young philopatric females. Our results also suggest that the early high investment in reproduction of dispersive females trades-off with an earlier onset of senescence than in philopatric females. We further found that young dispersive females produce smaller offspring in lower body condition than do young philopatric females. Overall, our results provide empirical evidence that dispersive and philopatric individuals have different age-specific life-history traits.

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Cotto, O., Massot, M., Ronce, O., & Clobert, J. (2015). Dispersal as a source of variation in age-specific reproductive strategies in a wild population of lizards. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 282(1820). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2015.1741

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