High levels of genetic monogamy in the group‐living Australian lizardEgernia stokesii
- 3 September 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Ecology
- Vol. 11 (9) , 1787-1794
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-294x.2002.01552.x
Abstract
The Australian lizardEgernia stokesiilives in spatially and temporally stable groups of up to 17 individuals. We have recently shown that these groups are comprised of breeding partners, their offspring and, in some cases, highly related adults, providing the first genetic evidence of a family structure in any lizard species. Here we investigated the mating system ofE. stokesiiusing data from up to eight polymorphic microsatellite loci and tested the hypothesis that breeding partners are monogamous both within and between mating seasons. Among 16 laboratory‐born litters from field collected gravid females from two sites in South Australia, 75% had a single male parent and no male contributed to more than one litter, indicating a high level of genetic monogamy within a season. Additional analyses of field caught individuals, captured between 1994 and 1998, enabled assignment of parentage for 70 juveniles and subadults. These data showed that most young (88.6%) had both parents from within the same group and that high proportions of males (88.9%) and females (63.6%) have multiple cohorts of offspring only with the same partner. Our results suggest that monogamy both within and between seasons is a common mating strategy ofE. stokesiiand that breeding partners maintain stable associations together and with multiple cohorts of their offspring over periods of up to at least 5 years.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Microsatellite mutations in litters of the Australian lizard Egernia stokesiiJournal of Evolutionary Biology, 2000
- Recognition of Pheromones from Group Members in a Gregarious Lizard, Egernia stokesiiJournal of Herpetology, 2000
- Grouping behaviour, tail-biting behaviour and sexual dimorphism in the armadillo lizard (Cordylus cataphractus) from South AfricaJournal of Zoology, 1999
- Brief communication. Isolation of microsatellite loci from a social lizard, Egernia stokesii, using a modified enrichment procedureJournal of Heredity, 1999
- Short allele dominance as a source of heterozygote deficiency at microsatellite loci: experimental evidence at the dinucleotide locus Gv1CT inGracilaria gracilis(Rhodophyta)Molecular Ecology, 1998
- Statistical confidence for likelihood‐based paternity inference in natural populationsMolecular Ecology, 1998
- Sexually dimorphic head sizes and reproductive success in the sleepy lizardTiliqua rugosaJournal of Zoology, 1996
- Mother–offspring recognition in two Australian lizards,Tiliqua rugosaandEgernia stokesiiAnimal Behaviour, 1996
- Nonamplifying alleles at microsatellite loci: a caution for parentage and population studiesMolecular Ecology, 1995
- Mutation of human short tandem repeatsHuman Molecular Genetics, 1993