Reproductive seasonality in a swamp-locked African cichlid |
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Authors: | E. E. Reardon L. J. Chapman |
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Affiliation: | Biology Department, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada;, Wildlife Conservation Society, Southern Boulevard, Bronx, NY, USA |
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Abstract: | Abstract – This study quantified the seasonal pattern of reproduction in a swamp-dwelling population of the African cichlid Pseudocrenilabrus multicolor victoriae. In the hypoxic waters of the Lwamunda Swamp, Uganda, P. multicolor was reproductively active throughout the year, even during the peak of the dry seasons. However, the degree of activity was seasonal, with rainfall providing a predictor of the percentage of ripe, mature females. There was no correlation between aquatic oxygen availability dissolved oxygen (DO) and either adjusted mean gonad mass or percentage of mature females, suggesting that DO is not limiting reproductive activity in this system. Reproductively mature females were larger during drier periods and may maximise their lifetime reproductive success by producing young throughout the year; but with a lower brooding efficiency. A comparison with Welcomme's (1969) study of a river-swamp system feeding Lake Victoria suggests that reproductive patterning is variable among populations of P. multicolor and may reflect adaptive response to chronically hypoxic conditions in the Lwamunda Swamp. |
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Keywords: | mouth brooding Cichlidae hypoxia wetlands fish reproduction East Africa |
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