Contemporary egg size divergence among sympatric grayling demes with common ancestors |
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Authors: | F. Gregersen,T. O. Haugen, L. A. Vø llestad |
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Affiliation: | Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis (CEES), Department of Biology, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway |
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Abstract: | ![]() Abstract This study documents divergence in egg size that has occurred over less than 25 generations among sympatric demes of European grayling ( Thymallus thymallus ) from Lake Lesjaskogsvatnet in Norway. A cluster analysis identified two clusters of tributaries: one of small, warm tributaries (SW) and the other of large, cold tributaries (LC). Spawning occurs more regularly and up to 4 weeks earlier in SW tributaries compared with that in LC ones. We explored numerous mixed models predicting egg size from year (random effect), basin and tributary (fixed effects), and female length. The most supported model estimated length-adjusted egg size to be larger in SW tributaries compared with that in LC tributaries. Combinations of density-dependent (competition for food/space) and density-independent (temperature) factors along with phenotypic plasticity and maternal effects are discussed as potential differentiation sources. We suggest high temperatures (increased metabolism) to reinforce the selective advantage of large eggs under conditions with highly density-dependent fry interactions. |
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Keywords: | adaptive divergence reproductive traits early life history parallelism |
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