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(Reference retrieved automatically from Web of Science through information on FAPESP grant and its corresponding number as mentioned in the publication by the authors.)

Relationships between environmental gradients and geographic variation in the intraspecific body size of three species of frogs (Anura)

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Author(s):
Boaratti, Andre Zuffo [1] ; Da Silva, Fernando Rodrigues [1]
Total Authors: 2
Affiliation:
[1] Univ Fed Sao Carlos UFSCar, Dept Ciencias Ambientais, BR-18052780 Sorocaba, SP - Brazil
Total Affiliations: 1
Document type: Journal article
Source: AUSTRAL ECOLOGY; v. 40, n. 8, p. 869-876, DEC 2015.
Web of Science Citations: 5
Abstract

The relationship between environmental gradients and patterns of geographic variation in body size has been a controversial topic for ectothermic organisms globally. To examine whether the patterns that generally hold in more temperate species also hold for tropical ones, we examined the intraspecific body size variation in three species of Neotropical frogs, Dendropsophus minutus, Hypsiboas faber and Physalaemus cuvieri, along different environmental gradients (e.g. temperature, precipitation and topography). We analysed four competing hypotheses: (i) the water availability hypothesis that predicts a negative relationship between body size and precipitation; (ii) the heat balance hypothesis that predicts a negative relationship between body size and temperature; (iii) the topography hypothesis that predicts a negative relationship between body size and altitude; and (iv) the mixed-effect hypothesis that predicts that individuals occurring in wet and cold sites would be larger than individuals occurring in dry and warm sites. The spatial pattern of geographic variation in body size among populations of H.faber was associated with the mixed-effect hypothesis. In localities with low precipitation seasonality and cold conditions, H.faber individuals were larger than in localities with high precipitation seasonality and warm conditions. Variation in the body size of D.minutus was the opposite of that predicted by the heat balance hypothesis. Individuals in localities with high temperatures were larger than in localities with low temperatures. On the other hand, variation in the body size of P.cuvieri was not associated with the variables used in this study. Our results suggest that intraspecific variation in anuran body size is more dependent on species-specific response than on the region (i.e. temperate or tropical) where they occur. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 13/50714-0 - Influence of ecological and evolutionary processes in structuring amphibian communities at different spatial and temporal scales
Grantee:Fernando Rodrigues da Silva
Support Opportunities: BIOTA-FAPESP Program - Young Investigators Grants
FAPESP's process: 12/07356-2 - Influence of the Atlantic Forest longitudinal climatic gradient in the body size variation of anuran
Grantee:Andre Zuffo Boaratti
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Scientific Initiation