Experimental manipulation of female reproduction reveals an intraspecific egg size-clutch size trade-off


Back to previous page
Authors: Williams, TD
Year: 2001
Journal: Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B-Biological Sciences 268: 423-428
Title: Experimental manipulation of female reproduction reveals an intraspecific egg size-clutch size trade-off
Abstract: A negative relationship, or trade-off, between egg size and clutch size is a central and long-standing component of life-history theory, yet there is little empirical evidence for such a trade-off, especially at the intraspecific level. Here, I show that female zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata) treated chronically during egg formation with the anti-oestrogen tamoxifen lay smaller eggs (by 8%) but produce larger clutches (on average two eggs more) than controls. Decreased egg mass in tamoxifen-treated females was associated with a 50% decrease in plasma levels of the two yolk precursors, vitellogenin and very-low-density lipoprotein. Although tamoxifen-treated females laid more; smaller eggs (and had a higher total expenditure in their clutch), they did not differ from controls in the number of chicks fledged: the mass or size of these chicks at fledging, or the chicks' egg-production performance at three months of age. However, tamoxifen-treated females had lower relative hatching success: they laid more eggs but hatched the same number of chicks. Among individual tamoxifen-treated females, birds that laid the smallest eggs early in their laying sequence laid the largest number of additional eggs, that is, there was a negative correlation, or trade-off between egg size and clutch size.
Back to previous page
 

Please send suggestions for improving this publication database to sass-support@sfu.ca.
Departmental members may update their publication list.