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Evidence for a genetic component of female fecundity in British Roe Deer from studies of cranial morphometrics
Authors:A. J. M. HEWISON
Affiliation:Department of Biology, University of Southampton, Southampton SO16 7PX, UK
Abstract:1. The fecundity of adult female Roe Deer varies by a factor of 2·35 among populations across Britain. Although much of this variation may be related to environmental differences, there could also be a genetic influence on this component of fitness. In this paper, the relationship between morphological variation of the skull and female fecundity in Roe Deer from 13 populations across the deer's entire range in Britain is investigated.
2. First, principal components analysis of cranial data was used to infer genetic relationships among populations. Three distinct morphological types were identified, all significantly differentiated from the others in terms of both size and shape. The results are compared with earlier analyses of biochemical variation among the same sites; a possible native morph is identified.
3. Subsequently, canonical ordination techniques (redundancy analysis) were used to control for the effects of 'environmental' variation (female body mass, density, climate) and, with the residual variation, the correlation between skull morphology and female fecundity was investigated. This correlation is significant for both the extracted axes ( R >0·7), indicating that there are heritable differences between populations affecting female fecundity.
4. The analysis suggests that Roe Deer native to Britain are of a genetically less fecund type relative to populations established by introductions from the continent.
Keywords:Canonical ordination    fitness    introductions    redundancy analysis    skull morphometrics
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