All in one: single‐season multi‐clutching in an ephemeral pool‐breeding frog that is otherwise virtually semelparous

The sandpaper frog, Lechriodus fletcheri, is a temperate anuran that has previously been shown to be virtually semelparous, with adults overwhelmingly reproducing in a single year of life. Yet, this species almost exclusively oviposits in highly ephemeral pools where there is a high chance of total...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of zoology (1987) 2023-07, Vol.320 (3), p.226-235
Hauptverfasser: Gould, J, Clulow, J, Rippon, P, Upton, R, Clulow, S
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container_issue 3
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container_title Journal of zoology (1987)
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creator Gould, J
Clulow, J
Rippon, P
Upton, R
Clulow, S
description The sandpaper frog, Lechriodus fletcheri, is a temperate anuran that has previously been shown to be virtually semelparous, with adults overwhelmingly reproducing in a single year of life. Yet, this species almost exclusively oviposits in highly ephemeral pools where there is a high chance of total reproductive failure due to hydroperiods often being unpredictable and too short for their offspring to reach metamorphosis. We sought to understand how L. fletcheri copes reproductively in such a risky breeding environment in the absence of a classical iteroparous life history. We investigated aspects of reproduction in wild and laboratory‐reared individuals to determine whether females are capable of intra‐seasonal multi‐clutching and/or clutch partitioning, and males of fertilizing multiple clutches. Direct field evidence was obtained that males participated in multiple mating events within season, while indirect evidence of this ability in females was obtained based on laboratory‐held individuals that produced an additional batch of mature oocytes weeks after an initial release of eggs. Our findings suggest that both males and females likely have the capacity to participate in multiple reproductive events within season and, while most adults may not reproduce more than once, that they are abbreviate iteroparous rather than truly semelparous. Our findings provide evidence that short‐lived anurans may exploit alternative bet‐hedging strategies that mimic the fitness benefits of multi‐year iteroparity. Adult sandpaper frogs (Lechriodus fletcheri) overwhelmingly reproduce in a single breeding year of their short lives, despite depositing eggs in ephemeral waterbodies where there is a high chance of total reproductive failure. We show that individuals of both sexes likely have the capacity to participate in multiple reproductive events within a single breeding season. We thus suggest that L. fletcheri are abbreviate iteroparous rather than truly semelparous, providing evidence that short‐lived anurans may exploit alternative bet‐hedging strategies that mimic the fitness benefits of multi‐year iteroparity.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/jzo.13068
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects abbreviate iteroparity
abrasives
Adults
Amphibians
Anura
anuran
bet‐hedging
Breeding
breeding environment
Clutches
ephemeral habitat
Females
frogs
Gametocytes
Iteroparity
laboratory rearing
Lechriodus fletcheri
Life history
Males
Metamorphosis
Offspring
Oocytes
progeny
reproduction
Reproductive behaviour
Reproductive failure
reproductive strategies
Seasons
semelparity
title All in one: single‐season multi‐clutching in an ephemeral pool‐breeding frog that is otherwise virtually semelparous
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