Cyclomorphosis in natural populations of Daphnia cephalata King |
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Authors: | PAUL D. N. HEBERT |
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Affiliation: | School of Biological Sciences, University of Sydney, Australia |
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Abstract: | SUMMARY. Daphnia cephalata King is a major component of the zooplankton in freshwater ponds of eastern Australia. Phenotypic variation in head shape both within and between populations is striking. Some of this variation is ontogenetic, but among individuals of similar size head length still varies by a factor of two. The causes of this variation have been investigated by analysing head size in thirty-four populations of D. cephalata over a 17-month period. An annual cycle in crest size, apparently related to seasonal changes in mean temperature, was evident when the data were pooled. Large differences in head size were commonly observed, however, among samples collected simultaneously. Some of this variation was correlated with local differences in resource availability, which were due, in part, to local variation in Daphnia density. Other consistent interpopulation differences in head size were related to stable environmental differences among sites and probably also to genetic differences among populations. |
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