Allometric Engineering: An Experimental Test of the Causes of Interpopulational Differences in Performance
- 1 June 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 248 (4959) , 1106-1109
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.248.4959.1106
Abstract
Hatchling lizards (Sceloporus occidentalis) from a southern population are large and have high locomotor performance (speed and stamina) relative to hatchlings from northern populations. In order to determine whether differences in performance are an allometric consequence of interpopulation differences in size, yolk was removed from southern eggs, thereby producing miniaturized hatchlings equivalent in size to northern hatchlings. Miniaturized southern hatchlings no longer had higher speed than northern hatchlings, but maintained higher stamina. Interpopulation differences in speed but not in stamina are thus an allometric consequence of differences in egg size. Size manipulation adds an experimental dimension to aliometric analyses.This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Estimating the Form of Natural Selection on a Quantitative TraitEvolution, 1988
- Latitudinal Patterns of the Thermal Sensitivity of Sprint Speed in LizardsThe American Naturalist, 1988
- Individual variation in maximum aerobic capacity: Cardiovascular and enzymatic correlates in Rana catesbeianaJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1986
- Ontogenetic and individual variation in size, shape and speed in the Australian agamid lizard Amphibolurus nuchalisJournal of Zoology, 1985
- Genetics of Growth Predict Patterns of Brain-Size EvolutionScience, 1985
- Metallothionein-Human GH Fusion Genes Stimulate Growth of MiceScience, 1983
- On inference in ecology and evolutionary biology: the problem of multiple causesActa Biotheoretica, 1982
- The thermal dependence of lizard behaviourAnimal Behaviour, 1980
- ALLOMETRY AND SIZE IN ONTOGENY AND PHYLOGENYBiological Reviews, 1966
- Constant Differential Growth-Ratios and their SignificanceNature, 1924