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Unpredictable offspring survivorship in the damselfly, Megaloprepus coerulatus, shapes parental behavior, constrains sexual selection, and challenges traditional fitness estimates
Authors:Fincke O M  Hadrys H
Institution:Department of Zoology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma 73019 E-mail:;Zoologisches Institut der Universitaet Frankfurt, D-60323 Frankfurt, Germany;Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06511 E-mail: heike.hadrys@ecolevol.de
Abstract:Evolutionary biologists typically assume that the number of eggs fertilized or developing embryos produced is correlated with an individual's fitness. Using microsatellite markers, we document for the first time estimates of realized fitness quantified as the number of offspring surviving to adulthood in an insect under field conditions. In a territorial damselfly whose males defend tree hole oviposition sites, patterns of offspring survivorship could not be anticipated by adults. Fewer than half of the parents contributing eggs to a larval habitat realized any reproductive success from their investment. The best fitness correlate was the span over which eggs in a clutch hatched. Among parents, female fecundity and male fertilization success were poor predictors of realized fitness. Although body size was correlated with female clutch size and male mating success, larger parents did not realize greater fitness than smaller ones. The uncoupling of traditional fitness surrogates from realized fitness provides strong empirical evidence that selection at the larval stage constrains selection on mated adults.
Keywords:Fitness  hatching asynchrony  larval survivorship  Odonata  selection  
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