4.6 Article

The role of environmental variation in mediating fitness trade-offs for an amphibian polyphenism

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
Volume 92, Issue 9, Pages 1815-1827

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13974

Keywords

climate; life history; metamorphosis; paedomorphosis; salamanders; traits

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This study analyzed a 32-year mark-recapture dataset on Arizona tiger salamanders to examine the fitness trade-offs between two life history morphs (aquatic paedomorphs and terrestrial metamorphs). The results showed that the morphs exhibited different responses to environmental variation, indicating climate-induced fitness trade-offs. The findings contribute to our understanding of how climate and habitat interact to maintain polyphenisms and have implications for the effects of climate change on polyphenisms.
Fitness trade-offs are a foundation of ecological and evolutionary theory because trade-offs can explain life history variation, phenotypic plasticity, and the existence of polyphenisms.Using a 32-year mark-recapture dataset on lifetime fitness for 1093 adult Arizona tiger salamanders (Ambystoma mavortium nebulosum) from a high elevation, polyphenic population, we evaluated the extent to which two life history morphs (aquatic paedomorphs vs. terrestrial metamorphs) exhibited fitness trade-offs in breeding and body condition with respect to environmental variation (e.g. climate) and internal state-based variables (e.g. age).Both morphs displayed a similar response to higher probabilities of breeding during years of high spring precipitation (i.e. not indicative of a morph-specific fitness trade-off). There were likely no climate-induced fitness trade-offs on breeding state for the two life history morphs because precipitation and water availability are vital to amphibian reproduction.Body condition displayed a contrasting response for the two morphs that was indicative of a climate-induced fitness trade-off. While metamorphs exhibited a positive relationship with summer snowpack conditions, paedomorphs were unaffected. Fitness trade-offs from summer snowpack are likely due to extended hydroperiods in temporary ponds, where metamorphs gain a fitness advantage during the summer growing season by exploiting resources that are unavailable to paeodomorphs. However, paedomorphs appear to have the overwintering fitness advantage because they consistently had higher body condition than metamorphs at the start of the summer growing season.Our results reveal that climate and habitat type (metamorphs as predominately terrestrial, paedomorphs as fully aquatic) interact to confer different advantages for each morph. These results advance our current understanding of fitness trade-offs in this well-studied polyphenic amphibian by integrating climate-based mechanisms. Our conclusions prompt future studies to explore how climatic variation can maintain polyphenisms and promote life history diversity, as well as the implications of climate change for polyphenisms.

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