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Influence
of sex and reproductive condition on terrestrial and aquatic locomotor
performance in the semi-aquatic snake Seminatrix pygaea
C. T. Winne
and W. A. Hopkins
University
of Georgia, Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, Drawer E, Aiken, SC 29802,
USA
Summary:
1. Most life-history models assume a trade-off between reproductive
investment and parental survival. Several studies have documented reproductive
costs in terms of reduced locomotor performance in terrestrial habitats.
However, few studies have determined the reproductive costs of pregnancy
in aquatic environments, or compared pregnancy-induced locomotor costs
among habitats. This knowledge gap is important because many organisms
rely on multiple habitat types during pregnancy.
2. We compared sexual differences in maximum locomotor velocity
and the relative impacts of pregnancy on locomotor performance in aquatic
and terrestrial environments for a semi-aquatic snake (Seminatrix pygaea).
In addition, because most life-history models predict a direct trade-off
between reproductive investment and reproductive costs, we quantified
the relationship between reproductive investment and postpartum increase
in velocity for both habitat types.
3. Both males and non-pregnant females always swam faster than
they crawled, but males were significantly faster for their size than
were non-pregnant females. These results mirror sexual differences known
to exist in other snakes, but differ in that the degree of sexual divergence
in velocity does not vary with habitat for S. pygaea.
4. Pregnancy significantly reduced both crawling and swimming velocity.
Moreover, pregnancy impaired crawling velocity significantly more than
swimming velocity. The mean (±1 SE) percentage increases in crawling
and swimming velocity after parturition were 72·8±21·6
and 59·4±12·8%, respectively. There was a direct
trade-off between reproductive investment and aquatic locomotor impairment:
snakes that invested more in offspring experienced larger decreases in
swimming velocity. However, evidence for such a trade-off in the terrestrial
habitat was weaker.
5. Our results demonstrate that the cost of reproduction for semi-aquatic
organisms may differ between aquatic and terrestrial habitats in complex
ways. Swimming may be more effective than crawling for escaping predators
during pregnancy, because swimming results in faster velocities and is
less impaired by pregnancy. However, the assumption of a direct trade-off
between reproductive investment and locomotor impairment maybe stronger
for swimming performance compared with crawling performance.
Key-words:
cost of reproduction, crawling, relative clutch mass, swimming, trade-offs
SREL Reprint
#2992
Winne, C.
T. and W. A. Hopkins. 2006. Influence of sex and reproductive condition
on terrestrial and aquatic locomotor performance in the semi-aquatic snake
Seminatrix pygaea. Functional Ecology 20:1054-1061.
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