Elucidating how life history traits vary geographically is important to understanding variation in population dynamics. Because many aspects of ectotherm life history are climate-dependent, geographic variation in climate is expected to have a large impact on population dynamics through effects on annual survival, body size, growth rate, age at first reproduction, size–fecundity relationship, and reproductive frequency. The Eastern Massasauga (Sistrurus catenatus) is a small, imperiled North American rattlesnake with a distribution centered on the Great Lakes region, where lake effects strongly influence local conditions. To address Eastern Massasauga life history data gaps, we compiled data from 47 study sites representing 38 counties across the range. We used multimodel inference and general linear models with geographic coordinates and annual climate normals as explanatory variables to clarify patterns of variation in life history traits. We found strong evidence for geographic variation in six of nine life history variables. Adult female snout-vent length and neonate mass increased with increasing mean annual precipitation. Litter size decreased with increasing mean temperature, and the size–fecundity relationship and growth prior to first hibernation both increased with increasing latitude. The proportion of gravid females also increased with increasing latitude, but this relationship may be the result of geographically varying detection bias. Our results provide insights into ectotherm life history variation and fill critical data gaps, which will inform Eastern Massasauga conservation efforts by improving biological realism for models of population viability and climate change.
Climatic and geographic predictors of life history variation in Eastern Massasauga (Sistrurus catenatus): A range-wide synthesis
Eric T. Hileman,R. King,John M. Adamski,T. G. Anton,Robyn L. Bailey,S. Baker,Nickolas D. Bieser,Thomas A. Bell,Kristin M. Bissell,Danielle R. Bradke,H. Campa,G. Casper,Karen Cedar,M. Cross,B. DeGregorio,M. Dreslik,L. Faust,Daniel S. Harvey,R. Hay,B. Jellen,Brent D. Johnson,G. Johnson,Brooke D Kiel,B. Kingsbury,M. Kowalski,Y. Lee,A. Lentini,J. Marshall,D. Mauger,Jennifer A. Moore,R. Paloski,C. Phillips,P. Pratt,T. Preney,K. Prior,A. Promaine,M. Redmer,H. K. Reinert,Jeremy D. Rouse,K. Shoemaker,S. Sutton,T. Vandewalle,P. J. Weatherhead,D. Wynn,Anne Yagi
Published 2017 in PLoS ONE
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2017
- Venue
PLoS ONE
- Publication date
2017-02-14
- Fields of study
Biology, Geography, Medicine, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
CONCEPTS
- body size
Size-related measurements used for adult females and neonates in the life history dataset.
Aliases: adult female snout-vent length, neonate mass
- eastern massasauga
The small North American rattlesnake species examined across its geographic range.
Aliases: Sistrurus catenatus
- growth prior to first hibernation
Juvenile growth measured before the snakes enter their first hibernation.
- latitude
The north-south geographic position of a study site.
- litter size
The number of offspring produced in a litter.
- mean annual precipitation
The long-term average annual precipitation used as a site-level climate predictor.
- mean temperature
The long-term average annual temperature used as a site-level climate predictor.
- size-fecundity relationship
The association between female size and reproductive output measured as litter production.
Aliases: size–fecundity relationship
REFERENCES
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