4.2 Article

Comparative demography of a temperate anuran, Rana chensinensis, along a relatively fine elevational gradient

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY
Volume 84, Issue 12, Pages 1789-1795

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/Z06-180

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Rana chensinensis (David, 1875) is a temperate anuran endemic to northern China. We examined differences in demographic traits of the populations from three elevations (1400, 1700, and 2000 m) along a montane river in 2002. We found that frogs from higher elevations had delayed maturity, a larger size at maturity, and slower growth rates compared with frogs at lower elevations. This life-history model is similar to observations of other amphibians living in montane areas. However, discordance with the expected model occurred between neighboring populations and the variation was sex-specific. Mid-elevation adult males were significantly older and larger than their low-elevation congeners, but they were statistically similar in age and size to frogs from high elevations; females from mid elevations were not statistically different in age and size from females from our low-elevation site, but they were significantly younger and smaller than high-elevation females. These variations may be related to sexual differences in life-history strategies, which might not covary systematically when elevational gradients are set at a finer scale. At each elevation, the sex ratio was skewed towards females; females also matured later, lived longer, and were larger. Age was a major factor related to size, but other factors played a role in shaping size differences both between Populations and between sexes.

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