The number of offspring parents rear varies considerably among closely related lineages, individuals, and even reproductive events by one individual. Constraints can come at any point, from the costs of producing a large clutch to the cost of caring for a large brood of dependent young. We report here on observations of the early phase of a reproductive cycle in a captive colony of Oophaga pumilio, a poison frog with offspring entirely dependent on maternally provisioned trophic eggs. We tracked reproductive clutches, and found that while clutch and egg size were variable, neither predicted the success of a clutch; there was also no evidence of a trade-off between clutch and egg size. Larger eggs did, however, produce larger tadpoles, and when parents transported only a subset of the brood to nurseries, the tadpoles they moved were larger than the ones they did not. Adaptive adjustment of parental investment is a key life-history trait, and a complete accounting of the way families are constructed is key to understanding the evolution of parental care, parental favoritism, and cooperation and conflict among closely related individuals.
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Influence of environmental factors and body condition on the post-oviposition behavior in the emerald glass frog Espadarana prosoblepon (Centrolenidae)
In species with parental care behaviors, parents may adjust the intensity and duration of their care if fluctuation in factors such as environmental variables or body condition affects offspring survival. In the face of environmental changes, many egg-laying species remain with their clutch for extended periods if this behavioral adjustment provides tangible benefits to the offspring. However, the length of time parents stay with the offspring may also differ depending on the individual’s body condition. In the glass frog family (Centrolenidae), several species exhibit long-term egg attendance in which they remain with their clutch for several days after oviposition takes place. For some of them, changes in environmental variables lead to increased parental care efforts. For the species in which parents remain with their offspring for a short period (less than 24 hours), it is less clear if this constitutes parenting behavior, and whether parents adjust their efforts as a function of environmental change or the parent’s body condition remains unexplored. We studied a population of the Emerald Glass Frog,Espadarana prosoblepon, a species that exhibits a short period of quiescence after oviposition (less than three hours). Our study aimed to determine whether females alter the length of their post-oviposition quiescence period in response to changes in environmental variables (i.e., temperature, humidity, rainfall, and mean wind speed) or female body condition. Pairs in amplexus were captured in the field and transported to semi-natural enclosures to record the duration of post-oviposition quiescence using infrared cameras. Females’ post-oviposition quiescence lasted an average of 67.4 ± 26.6 min (range = 22.7–158.3 min). We did not find a significant relationship between the duration of the post-oviposition quiescence and any of the environmental variables tested. Similarly, post-oviposition quiescence duration was not influenced by female body condition. Because the variation observed in the duration of post-oviposition quiescence was not related to changes in extrinsic (environmental) or intrinsic (body condition) factors, we found no evidence that females ofE. prosobleponmodify their post-oviposition behavior in response to any of the variables examined in this study. Future research investigating the adaptive significance of the post-oviposition quiescence observed in this species is needed to understand how this behavior is related to parental care efforts.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1712757
- PAR ID:
- 10483007
- Publisher / Repository:
- PeerJ
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- PeerJ
- Volume:
- 10
- ISSN:
- 2167-8359
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- e13616
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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