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

Geographical variation in the reproduction and sexual dimorphism of the Boddaert's tropical racer, Mastigodryas boddaerti (Serpentes: Colubridae)

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Author(s):
Débora M. Siqueira [1] ; Loana P. Nascimento [2] ; Giovanna G. Montingelli [3] ; Maria Cristina dos Santos-Costa [2]
Total Authors: 4
Affiliation:
[1] Universidade Federal do Pará. Laboratório de Zoologia e Ecologia de Vertebrados - Brasil
[2] Fed Univ Para, Lab Zool & Ecol Vertebrados, BR-66075110 Belem, Para - Brazil
[3] Univ Sao Paulo, Museu Zool, Lab Herpetol, BR-04263000 Sao Paulo - Brazil
Total Affiliations: 3
Document type: Journal article
Source: Zoologia; v. 30, n. 5, p. 475-481, 2013-10-00.
Abstract

We obtained data on time of sexual maturity, dimorphism, fecundity and on the reproductive cycle of Mastigodryas boddaerti (Sentzen, 1796) through the examination of 321 preserved specimens, of which 221 were collected in the Brazilian Amazon region and 100 in the Cerrado savannas of Central Brazil. The degree of sexual size dimorphism (snout-vent length, SVL) was significantly greater in the specimens from the Cerrado in comparison with those from the Amazon. Females had a significantly larger number of ventral scales, on average, whereas males had more sub-caudal scales. However, there was no intersexual difference in tail length or head width, although the heads of the males were significantly longer, which may reflect dietary differences. Breeding females from the Amazon region contained between one and six eggs (N = 12, mean = 3.0), whereas two females from the Cerrado had four to six eggs (N = 10, mean = 5.0). No relationship was found between the SVL of the Amazonian females and the number of eggs or vitellogenic follicles they contained (Cerrado females were not analyzed here due to small sample size). Males are smaller than their female counterpart when they reach sexual maturity. Even though females from the Amazon reproduce throughout the year, females from the Cerrado breed seasonality. (AU)