High levels of genetic monogamy in the group-living Australian lizard Egernia stokesii

被引:63
|
作者
Gardner, MG
Bull, CM
Cooper, SJB
机构
[1] S Australian Museum, Evolutionary Biol Unit, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia
[2] Flinders Univ S Australia, Sch Biol Sci, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia
关键词
Egernia stokesii; family structure; lizards; mating system; microsatellites; monogamy;
D O I
10.1046/j.1365-294X.2002.01552.x
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The Australian lizard Egernia stokesii lives in spatially and temporally stable groups of up to 17 individuals. We have recently shown that these groups are comprised of breeding partners, their offspring and, in some cases, highly related adults, providing the first genetic evidence of a family structure in any lizard species. Here we investigated the mating system of E. stokesii using data from up to eight polymorphic microsatellite loci and tested the hypothesis that breeding partners are monogamous both within and between mating seasons. Among 16 laboratory-born litters from field collected gravid females from two sites in South Australia, 75% had a single male parent and no male contributed to more than one litter, indicating a high level of genetic monogamy within a season. Additional analyses of field caught individuals, captured between 1994 and 1998, enabled assignment of parentage for 70 juveniles and subadults. These data showed that most young (88.6%) had both parents from within the same group and that high proportions of males (88.9%) and females (63.6%) have multiple cohorts of offspring only with the same partner. Our results suggest that monogamy both within and between seasons is a common mating strategy of E. stokesii and that breeding partners maintain stable associations together and with multiple cohorts of their offspring over periods of up to at least 5 years.
引用
收藏
页码:1787 / 1794
页数:8
相关论文
共 40 条
  • [21] Reproduction in a group-living lizard, Cordylus cataphractus (Cordylidae), from South Africa
    Flemming, AF
    Mouton, PLN
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HERPETOLOGY, 2002, 36 (04) : 691 - 696
  • [22] Solitary individuals in populations of the group-living lizard Ouroborus cataphractus: voluntary or forced?
    Mouton, P. le Fras N.
    Glover, Janine L.
    Flemming, Alexander F.
    [J]. AFRICAN ZOOLOGY, 2014, 49 (02) : 307 - 310
  • [23] Scat on the doorstep: Refuge choice in a group-living lizard is influenced by the presence of scat piles
    Thompson, Shelley A.
    Pearson, Sarah K.
    While, Geoffrey M.
    Chapple, David G.
    Gardner, Michael G.
    [J]. AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, 2020, 45 (04) : 426 - 434
  • [24] Genetic Diversity and Relatedness of Group-Living Small Mammals on the Mongolian Plateau
    Wang, Guiming
    Wan, Xinrong
    Liu, Wei
    Shan, Xueyan
    [J]. DIVERSITY-BASEL, 2022, 14 (09):
  • [25] Molecular genetic perspective of group-living in a polygynous fruit bat, Cynopterus sphinx
    Chattopadhyay, Balaji
    Garg, Kritika M.
    Doss, Paramanantha Swami
    Ramakrishnan, Uma
    Kandula, Sripathi
    [J]. MAMMALIAN BIOLOGY, 2011, 76 (03) : 290 - 294
  • [26] Molecular genetic perspective of group-living in a polygynous fruit bat, Cynopterus sphinx
    Balaji Chattopadhyay
    Kritika M. Garg
    Paramanantha Swami Doss
    Uma Ramakrishnan
    Sripathi Kandula
    [J]. Mammalian Biology, 2011, 76 : 290 - 294
  • [27] Information Content in Chorus Songs of the Group-Living Australian Magpie (Cracticus tibicen dorsalis) in Western Australia
    Baker, Myron C.
    [J]. ETHOLOGY, 2009, 115 (03) : 227 - 238
  • [28] COOPERATIVE TERRITORIAL DEFENSE IN THE AUSTRALIAN MAGPIE, GYMNORHINA-TIBICEN (PASSERIFORMES, CRACTICIDAE), A GROUP-LIVING SONGBIRD
    FARABAUGH, SM
    BROWN, ED
    HUGHES, JM
    [J]. ETHOLOGY, 1992, 92 (04) : 283 - 292
  • [29] An evaluation of daily, seasonal and population-level variation in the thermal preference of a group-living lizard, Ouroborus cataphractus (Sauria: Cordylidae)
    Truter, Johannes Christoff
    van Wyk, Johannes Hendrik
    Mouton, Pieter le Fras Nortier
    [J]. AMPHIBIA-REPTILIA, 2014, 35 (04) : 391 - 403
  • [30] Random non-coding fragments of lizard DNA: anonymous nuclear loci for the Australian skink, Tiliqua rugosa, and their utility in other Egernia-group species
    Ansari, Talat Hojat
    Bertozzi, Terry
    Hacking, Jessica
    Cooper, Steven J. B.
    Gardner, Michael G.
    [J]. AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY, 2014, 62 (06) : 515 - 518