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1 December 2015 Induction of Metamorphosis Causes Differences in Sex-Specific Allocation Patterns in Axolotls ( Ambystoma mexicanum) that Have Different Growth Histories
Pamela M. Clarkson, Christopher K. Beachy
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Abstract

We tested the hypothesis that salamanders growing at different rates would have allocation patterns that differ among male and female metamorphic and larval salamanders.We raised individual axolotls, Ambystoma mexicanum, on four food regimes: constant high growth (throughout the experiment), constant low growth (restricted throughout the experiment), high growth switched to low growth (ad libitum switched after 140 d to restricted), and low growth switched to high growth (restricted switched after 140 d to ad libitum). Because axolotls are obligate paedomorphs, we exposed half of the salamanders to thyroid hormone to induce metamorphosis. We assayed growth and dissected and weighed gonads and fat bodies. Salamanders that were switched from restricted to ad libitum food regime delayed metamorphosis. In all treatment groups, females had larger gonads than males and males had larger fat bodies than females. The association between storage and reproduction differed between larvae and metamorphs and depended on sex.

Copyright 2015 Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles
Pamela M. Clarkson and Christopher K. Beachy "Induction of Metamorphosis Causes Differences in Sex-Specific Allocation Patterns in Axolotls ( Ambystoma mexicanum) that Have Different Growth Histories," Journal of Herpetology 49(4), 621-626, (1 December 2015). https://doi.org/10.1670/14-141
Accepted: 1 February 2015; Published: 1 December 2015
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