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The influence of maternal thermal environments on reproductive traits and hatchling traits in a Lacertid lizard,Takydromus septentrionalis
Institution:2. ICube, UMR 7357, University of Strasbourg/CNRS and FMTS, Faculty of Medicine, Strasbourg, France;3. Integrative Structural and Chemical Biology (iSCB) and INT-3D Molecular Modeling Platform, Cancer Research Centre of Marseille, CNRS UMR7258, INSERM U1068, Institut Paoli Calmettes, Aix-Marseille University UM105, Marseille, France;4. Lane Center for Computational Biology, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA;5. Department of Digestive, Hepato-Biliary and Endocrine Surgery, Brabois University Hospital, Nancy, France;11. Department of Visceral Surgery and Transplantation, Hautepierre Hospital, University Hospitals of Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France;12. Department of Internal Medicine, Diabetes and Metabolic Disorders, Hautepierre Hospital, University Hospitals of Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France;8. Section on Genetics and Endocrinology (SEGEN), Program on Developmental Endocrinology and Genetics (PDEGEN), Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA;9. La Timone University Hospital, European Center for Research in Medical Imaging, Aix-Marseille University, Marseille, France
Abstract:The thermal environment can induce substantial variation in important life-history traits. Experimental manipulation of the thermal environment can help researchers determine the contribution of this factor to phenotypic variation in life-history traits. During the reproductive season, we kept female northern grass lizards, Takydromus septentrionalis (Lacertidae), in three temperature-controlled rooms (25, 28 and 32 °C) to measure the effect of the maternal thermal environment on reproductive traits. Maternal thermal environment remarkably affected reproductive frequency and thereby seasonal reproductive output, but had little effect on reproductive traits per clutch or hatchling traits. Females kept at 32 °C produced more clutches and thus had shorter clutch intervals than females from 28 to 25 °C. Clutch size, clutch mass, relative clutch mass, egg size and hatchling traits did not vary among the three treatments. The eggs produced by the females were incubated at 27 °C and the traits of hatchlings were measured. The result that egg (offspring) size was independent of maternal thermal environments is consistent with the prediction of the optimal egg size (offspring) theory. The eggs produced by low temperature females (28 and 25 °C) took longer time to complete their post-oviposition development than did eggs produced by high temperature females (32 °C). This suggests that the eggs from low temperatures might have been laid when the embryos were at relatively early stages. Therefore, maternal thermal environment prior to oviposition could affect post-oviposition development in T. septentrionalis.
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