Do Life History Tactics Exist at the Intraspecific Level? Data from Freshwater Snails
- 1 June 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The American Naturalist
- Vol. 121 (6) , 871-879
- https://doi.org/10.1086/284109
Abstract
To determine if life history tactics were discernible at the intraspecific level, discriminant analysis was used to study tactics at 3 taxonomic levels in freshwater snails. Data on 7 life history traits were compiled from field rearing experiments and studies in the literature. Clustering of tactics in discriminant space was more obvious at the family than at lower taxonomic levels or across habitat types. Phenotypic correlations among traits were also somewhat greater at the family than at the population level. Prosobranchs have longer reproductive intervals and lower reproductive rates than pulmonates. Since pulmonates are more common in temporary ponds, one explanation for the divergence among families may be that pulmonates as a group are better adapted to uncertain habitats. Other explanations may be that variation at higher taxonomic levels is unrelated to selection regimes, because of either phylogenetic constraints or other confounding factors. The adaptive basis of life history variation is still best studied at the intraspecific level.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Resource Overlap and Competition in Pond Snails: An Experimental AnalysisEcology, 1982
- Effects of experimental manipulations on the life history pattern of Lymnaea stagnalis appressa say (pulmonata: lymnaeidae)Hydrobiologia, 1979
- Life-History Tactics: A Review of the IdeasThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1976