Merging the “Morphology–Performance–Fitness” Paradigm and Life-History Theory in the Eagle Lake Garter Snake Research Project

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2017-08-01
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Addis, Elizabeth
Gangloff, Eric
Palacios, Maria
Carr, Katherine
Bronikowski, Anne
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Bronikowski, Anne
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Ecology, Evolution and Organismal Biology
Abstract

The morphology–performance–fitness paradigm for testing selection on morphological traits has seen decades of successful application. At the same time, life-history approaches using matrix methods and perturbation studies have also allowed the direct estimate of selection acting on vital rates and the traits that comprise them. Both methodologies have been successfully applied to the garter snakes of the long-term Eagle Lake research project to reveal selection on morphology, such as color pattern, number of vertebrae, and gape size; and life-history traits such as birth size, growth rates, and juvenile survival. Here we conduct a reciprocal transplant study in a common laboratory environment to study selection on morphology and life-history. To place our results in the ecomorphology paradigm, we measure performance outcomes (feeding rates, growth, insulin-like growth factor 1 titers) of morphological variation (body size, condition) and their fitness consequences for juvenile survival—a trait that has large fitness sensitivities in these garter snake populations, and therefore is thought to be subject to strong selection. To better merge these two complementary theories, we end by discussing our findings in a nexus of morphology–performance–fitness–life history to highlight what these approaches, when combined, can reveal about selection in the wild.

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This is a manuscript of a proceeding from the symposium “Integrative Life–History of Whole-Organism Performance (SICB wide)” presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, January 4–8, 2017 at New Orleans, Louisiana. doi: 10.1093/icb/icx079.

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Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2017