COUNTERGRADIENT VARIATION IN GROWTH-RATE - COMPENSATION FOR LENGTH OF THE GROWING-SEASON AMONG ATLANTIC SILVERSIDES FROM DIFFERENT LATITUDES

被引:504
|
作者
CONOVER, DO
PRESENT, TMC
机构
[1] Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook, 11794-5000, NY
关键词
Countergradient variation; Growth rate; Latitudinal variation; Life history; Seasonality;
D O I
10.1007/BF00317554
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
How do organisms adapt to the differences in temperature and length of the growing season that occur with latitude? Among Atlantic silversides (Menidia menidia) along the east coast of North America, the length of the first growing season declines by a factor of about 2.5 with increasing latitude. Yet body size at the end of the first growing season does not decline. High-latitude fish must, therefore, grow faster within the growing season than do low-latitude fish. This geographical pattern has a genetic basis. Laboratory experiments on fish from six different locations revealed a latitudinal gradient in the capacity for growth (i.e., maximum growth potential). In two subsequent experiments using fish from Nova Scotia (NS), New York (NY) and South Carolina (SC) that had been separately reared in a common environment for several generations, differences in growth rate among populations were highly significant. The rank order was NS>NY>SC, but the difference among populations depended on temperature. High-latitude fish outperformed those from low latitudes primarily at the high temperatures that low-latitude fish would be expected to experience most often in nature. These results suggest that instead of being adapted for growth at low temperatures, fish from high latitudes are adapted for rapid elevation of growth rate during the brief interval of the year when high temperatures occur. Selection on growth rate results from sizedependent winter mortality: the importance to winter survival of being large increases with latitude but the length of the growing season simultaneously decreases. The end result is countergradient variation in growth rate, a phenomenon that may be much more widespread than currently recognized. © 1990 Springer-Verlag.
引用
收藏
页码:316 / 324
页数:9
相关论文
共 9 条
  • [2] CHANGES IN THE RATE OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS, GROWTH-RATE OF PLANT WEIGHT AND LEAF AREA, AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF ASSIMILATES IN DIFFERENT VARIETIES OF POTATO DURING THE GROWING-SEASON
    MARKOWSKI, A
    BUDZIOCH, W
    KOSCIELNIAK, J
    [J]. BULLETIN DE L ACADEMIE POLONAISE DES SCIENCES-SERIE DES SCIENCES BIOLOGIQUES, 1979, 27 (05): : 433 - 444
  • [3] Countergradient variation in growth of young striped bass (Morone saxatilis) from different latitudes
    Conover, DO
    Brown, JJ
    Ehtisham, A
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 1997, 54 (10) : 2401 - 2409
  • [4] Variation in larval growth rate among striped bass stocks from different latitudes
    Brown, JJ
    Ehtisham, A
    Conover, DO
    [J]. TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN FISHERIES SOCIETY, 1998, 127 (04) : 598 - 610
  • [5] Drought- induced decrease in tree productivity mainly mediated by the maximum growth rate and growing-season length in a subtropical forest
    Zhang, Zheqi
    Zhou, Lingyan
    Lu, Chunyan
    Fu, Yuling
    Gu, Zhizhuang
    Chen, Yang
    Zhang, Guodong
    Zhou, Xuhui
    [J]. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2024, 563
  • [6] GENETIC-VARIATION IN GROWTH-RATE OF ATLANTIC SALMON WITH DIFFERENT TRYPSIN-LIKE ISOZYME PATTERNS
    TORRISSEN, KR
    [J]. AQUACULTURE, 1991, 93 (04) : 299 - 312
  • [7] Variation in intrinsic individual growth rate among populations of leatherside chub (Snyderichthys copei Jordan & Gilbert):: adaptation to temperature or length of growing season?
    Belk, MC
    Johnson, JB
    Wilson, KW
    Smith, ME
    Houston, DD
    [J]. ECOLOGY OF FRESHWATER FISH, 2005, 14 (02) : 177 - 184
  • [8] DIURNAL-VARIATION IN THE LENGTH GROWTH-RATE OF 3 INTERTIDAL ALGAE FROM THE PACIFIC WEST-COAST
    STROMGREN, T
    [J]. AQUATIC BOTANY, 1984, 20 (1-2) : 1 - 10
  • [9] The dead of winter:: size dependent variation and genetic differences in seasonal mortality among Atlantic silverside (Atherinidae: Menidia menidia) from different latitudes
    Schultz, ET
    Conover, DO
    Ehtisham, A
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 1998, 55 (05) : 1149 - 1157