Reproductive site selection in a bromeliad breeding treefrog suggests complex evolutionary trade-offs.

Reproductive site selection is a key determinant of fitness in many taxa. However, if the site characteristics that enhance offspring survival are detrimental to the parent's survival or mating success, then complex evolutionary trade-offs occur. In the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, males of the t...

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Main Authors: Amanda Santiago Ferreira Lantyer-Silva, Anthony Waldron, Juliana Zina, Mirco Solé
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207131
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spelling doaj-87e274d56ebb438ab0b30f9800c99ee22021-03-03T21:04:16ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011312e020713110.1371/journal.pone.0207131Reproductive site selection in a bromeliad breeding treefrog suggests complex evolutionary trade-offs.Amanda Santiago Ferreira Lantyer-SilvaAnthony WaldronJuliana ZinaMirco SoléReproductive site selection is a key determinant of fitness in many taxa. However, if the site characteristics that enhance offspring survival are detrimental to the parent's survival or mating success, then complex evolutionary trade-offs occur. In the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, males of the treefrog species Aparasphenodon arapapa use the temporary water bodies in forest-floor bromeliads to court and mate. Males fit tightly into the plant with the head blocking the access and after mating, stay in the bromeliad with the offspring. Since evaporation of the temporary water body inside the bromeliad results in reproductive failure, we expected that males would simply choose the largest bromeliad tanks with the most water. We found that although this was generally true, males seemed to avoid both very large bromeliads and very high water volumes. Field observations suggested a trade-off mechanism for this pattern, whereby very large and water-filled tanks would reduce the male's ability to effectively seal the tank entrance, avoid predation, or call to mating females. Males also avoided bromeliads with leaf litter and preferred slightly inclined plants. Our results indicate that during reproductive site selection, this bromeliad-breeder needs to engage in complex trade-offs between selection pressures, balancing water requirements against the need for defense and potentially, the ability to attract a mate.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207131
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amanda Santiago Ferreira Lantyer-Silva
Anthony Waldron
Juliana Zina
Mirco Solé
spellingShingle Amanda Santiago Ferreira Lantyer-Silva
Anthony Waldron
Juliana Zina
Mirco Solé
Reproductive site selection in a bromeliad breeding treefrog suggests complex evolutionary trade-offs.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Amanda Santiago Ferreira Lantyer-Silva
Anthony Waldron
Juliana Zina
Mirco Solé
author_sort Amanda Santiago Ferreira Lantyer-Silva
title Reproductive site selection in a bromeliad breeding treefrog suggests complex evolutionary trade-offs.
title_short Reproductive site selection in a bromeliad breeding treefrog suggests complex evolutionary trade-offs.
title_full Reproductive site selection in a bromeliad breeding treefrog suggests complex evolutionary trade-offs.
title_fullStr Reproductive site selection in a bromeliad breeding treefrog suggests complex evolutionary trade-offs.
title_full_unstemmed Reproductive site selection in a bromeliad breeding treefrog suggests complex evolutionary trade-offs.
title_sort reproductive site selection in a bromeliad breeding treefrog suggests complex evolutionary trade-offs.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Reproductive site selection is a key determinant of fitness in many taxa. However, if the site characteristics that enhance offspring survival are detrimental to the parent's survival or mating success, then complex evolutionary trade-offs occur. In the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, males of the treefrog species Aparasphenodon arapapa use the temporary water bodies in forest-floor bromeliads to court and mate. Males fit tightly into the plant with the head blocking the access and after mating, stay in the bromeliad with the offspring. Since evaporation of the temporary water body inside the bromeliad results in reproductive failure, we expected that males would simply choose the largest bromeliad tanks with the most water. We found that although this was generally true, males seemed to avoid both very large bromeliads and very high water volumes. Field observations suggested a trade-off mechanism for this pattern, whereby very large and water-filled tanks would reduce the male's ability to effectively seal the tank entrance, avoid predation, or call to mating females. Males also avoided bromeliads with leaf litter and preferred slightly inclined plants. Our results indicate that during reproductive site selection, this bromeliad-breeder needs to engage in complex trade-offs between selection pressures, balancing water requirements against the need for defense and potentially, the ability to attract a mate.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207131
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