Geographic Variation in the Reproductive Phenology of a Widespread Amphibian
Department
Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-14-2023
Abstract
Geographic variation in reproductive phenology can reveal how life history is shaped by the environment. For amphibians, the timing of reproduction has downstream consequences on other life history traits such as larval period and size at metamorphosis. Two-lined Salamanders (Eurycea bislineata species complex) are widespread across the eastern United States and Canada and exhibit dramatic geographic variation in reproductive morphology, reproductive behavior, and larval life history, and thus make compelling models for studying these processes. Here, we compile courtship and nesting records from citizen science data, published literature, museum records, field notes, and social media to describe the geographic variation of reproductive phenology in the E. bislineata species complex. We demonstrate that the date of oviposition is negatively correlated with mean annual temperature and examine how this may interact with the timing of other seasonal behaviors such as migration and overwintering. Finally, we discuss how these geographic patterns may influence the evolution of reproductive tactics through differences in the spatial and temporal clustering of courtship opportunities in terrestrial and aquatic environments. .
Journal Title
Journal of Herpetology
Journal ISSN
00221511
Volume
57
Issue
2
First Page
125
Last Page
132
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1670/22-028