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Sex-specific movement ecology of the shortest-lived tetrapod during the mating season
Sex-specific movement ecology of the shortest-lived tetrapod during the mating season
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Sex-specific movement ecology of the shortest-lived tetrapod during the mating season
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Sex-specific movement ecology of the shortest-lived tetrapod during the mating season
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Sex-specific movement ecology of the shortest-lived tetrapod during the mating season
Sex-specific movement ecology of the shortest-lived tetrapod during the mating season
Journal Article

Sex-specific movement ecology of the shortest-lived tetrapod during the mating season

2022
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Overview
Sex-specific reproductive strategies are shaped by the distribution of potential mates in space and time. Labord’s chameleon ( Furcifer labordi ) from southwestern Madagascar is the shortest-lived tetrapod whose life-time mating opportunities are restricted to a few weeks. Given that these chameleons grow to sexual maturity within about three months and that all individuals die soon after breeding, their mating strategies should be adapted to these temporal constraints. The reproductive tactics of this or any other Malagasy chameleon species have not been studied, however. Radio-tracking and observations of 21 females and 18 males revealed that females exhibit high site fidelity, move small cumulative and linear distances, have low corresponding dispersal ratios and small occurrence distributions. In contrast, males moved larger distances in less predictable fashion, resulting in dispersal ratios and occurrence distributions 7–14 times larger than those of females, and males also had greater ranges of their vertical distribution. Despite synchronous hatching, males exhibited substantial inter-individual variation in body mass and snout-vent length that was significantly greater than in females, but apparently unrelated to their spatial tactics. Females mated with up to 6 individually-known mates, but frequent encounters with unmarked individuals indicate that much higher number of matings may be common, as are damaging fights among males. Thus, unlike perennial chameleons, F. labordi males do not seem to maintain and defend territories. Instead, they invest vastly more time and energy into locomotion for their body size than other species. Pronounced variation in key somatic traits may hint at the existence of alternative reproductive tactics, but its causes and consequences require further study. This first preliminary study of the mating system of a Malagasy chameleon indicates that, as in other semelparous tetrapods, accelerated life histories are tied to a mating system with intense contest and scramble competition among males.