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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Predation Environment Does Not Predict Life History in Morphologically-Constrained Fish Alfaro cultratus (Cyprinodontiformes: Poeciliidae)

Golden, Kaitlyn Beard 29 July 2020 (has links)
Predation is known to have a significant effect on life history, eliciting predictable responses. Physical constraints of body shape and size may also limit life history divergence. There may be a trade-off between adapting to predation, and limits placed by constraints that decrease life history divergence. We test this idea in the Costa Rican livebearing fish Alfaro cultratus. This species has a keeled ventral surface and does not develop a distended abdomen when pregnant like other livebearers. We describe the life history of A. cultratus in 20 different populations across predator and non-predator environments. We found significantly lower reproductive allotment in predator environments relative to non-predator environments, but no significant difference in female or male size at maturity, number of offspring, or size of offspring. We found that A. cultratus exhibit isometric patterns of allocation for clutch dry mass in relation to female dry mass in predator and non-predator environments. We suggest that body shape constraints in this species limit the life history divergence we typically see in predator and non-predator environments in other species.
2

Comparative Study of Dentition Among Species of Poecilia (Pisces)

Lewis, Steven R., Rasch, Ellen M., Hossler, Fred E., Kalbfleisch, John H., Monaco, Paul J. 01 January 1999 (has links)
Many studies in the genus Poecilia have focused on reproductive and genetic characteristics of Poecilia formosa, the Amazon molly, and its sympatric species P. latipinna and P. mexicana. The research literature of Poecilia dentition has been limited to general tooth morphology. Essentially absent are comparative analyses of dentition patterns and total numbers of teeth. The current study uses dentition analysis as a method to compare species in the genus Poecilia and to address some taxonomic issues related to these fish. The study focused on fish from the areas of southern Texas and northeastern Mexico. Through the use of scanning electron microscopy, the lower jaws of Poecilia spp were examined to determine total numbers of outer and inner teeth. In addition, the differences in distribution patterns of the inner teeth were recorded and compared. Statistical analyses were performed to determine which comparisons were significant. This study reveals several observations: 1) variations in the numbers of outer and inner teeth exist in some of these fish with respect to site of collection; 2) differences in total teeth numbers and dentition patterns were found both interspecifically and intraspecifically; and 3) in addition, dentition analysis provided evidence regarding the origin of P. formosa. This study supports the current notion that P. latipinna, the proported paternal component, and P. mexicana limantouri, the purported maternal component, are the progenitor species of P. formosa. Two unresolved taxonomic questions were addressed through dentition analysis. First, the present study supports the exclusion of the triploid associate of P. formosa as a separate species from P. formosa. Second, this study shows a significant difference in the number of inner teeth and in dentition patterns between P. mexicana limantouri and P. mexicana mexicana. Such differences, in addition to previously known distinguishing characteristics, should prompt careful consideration of whether or not these taxa deserve specific status or retention of their current subspecific status.
3

Phylogeography of the Livebearer Xenophallus umbratilis (Teleostei: Poeciliidae): Glacial Cycles and Sea Level Change Predict Diversification of a Freshwater Tropical Fish

Jones, Carissa Poole 05 December 2007 (has links) (PDF)
The biogeography of Central America is considered a classical case study in understanding the impact of vicariant events on patterns of biotic dispersal. While many biogeographers have focused on community composition and geographic limits of species at broad scales across Central America, much less work has focused on post-colonization diversification patterns at finer scales. The livebearing freshwater fish Xenophallus umbratilis presents an ideal system for determining the impact of recent earth history events on biodiversity in northern Costa Rica. Here, we test the hypothesis that marine inundation of the San Carlos and Northern Limón basins during the Miocene has caused genetic fragmentation among X. umbratilis populations, despite contemporary freshwater connections across this region. To test this idea, we collected mitochondrial (cytb) and nuclear (Xmrk-2) DNA sequence data from up to 162 individuals taken from 27 localities across northern Costa Rica. We employed a variety of analytical approaches, including: maximum parsimony (MP) and maximum likelihood (ML), analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA), nested clade phylogeographic analysis (NCPA), and demographic analysis of population size through time. We found four major clades within X. umbratilis, each geographically isolated with no shared haplotypes across drainages. Oddly, clades that occupy adjacent drainages are not always sister taxa in the phylogeny, suggesting that colonization in this species is more complex than a simple model of isolation by distance. All our results are consistent with the hypothesis that changes in sea level associated with glacial eustatic cycles have had an important effect in shaping diversification patterns in this species.
4

Mate Choice and Sexual Conflict in a Livebearing Fish

Kasper, Julia C 01 August 2023 (has links) (PDF)
Eavesdropping occurs when a receiver extracts information from an interaction without directly engaging with the signaler. Eavesdropping has been shown to be an effective way of evaluating the quality of potential mates and their abilities in male-male competition, without having to directly interact with them, thereby reducing energy costs and mating harassment. Girardinus metallicus is a livebearing poeciliid fish endemic to Cuba whose mating system is dominated by mating harassment in the form of sneak copulations, persistent displaying, and male-male aggression. G. metallicus has a male specific polymorphism in both melanin coloration and behavior. Males with melanin coloration are known as black morphs. Black morph males show persistent displaying and higher aggression, whereas plain morph males, the most common morph, do not have pronounced melanin patches and mate solely by sneak copulation. Plain morph males exhibit lower levels of aggression than black morph males. In Chapter 1, we created groups consisting of a female and two males differing in body size and exposed them to dichotomous choice tests of female preference before and after the females witnessed the males interacting with each other. We hypothesized that: 1) male morphological traits are sexually selected via female choice in G. metallicus because these traits indicate quality; 2) female G. metallicus eavesdrop on male aggression to make mate choice decisions because aggression may indicate the quality of the male and his propensity to harass females; and 3) male size classes differ in behavior and morphology (saturation, brightness, and gonopodium size), consistent with other poeciliid studies showing that body size influences phenotype and that these traits are intercorrelated. We predicted 1) females will associate more with more colorful males, males with shorter gonopodia, and the larger male, before eavesdropping on male-male interactions, after, or both; 2) females will spend more time associating with males that subsequently delivered more chases and bites to a competitor male; and 3) larger males would be more active, more persistent in mating attempts, be more aggressive, and have a larger gonopodium size, and greater saturation and brightness of their posterior, ventral, and dorsal body regions. We found that females prefer to associate with males whose body regions are highly saturated, before eavesdropping on the two males interacting, but females did not prefer saturation after eavesdropping. We also found that females had a preference for smaller gonopodia relative for a males’ body size after eavesdropping. We also found that as male size increases, gonopodium length is proportional to their standard length. This study is the first to show female preference for coloration traits within any morph of G. metallicus, suggesting that plain morph males are not as plain to females as their name suggests. Individual animals consistently vary in the average level of behavior exhibited across a range of contexts, which is also known as personality. Behavioral syndromes are correlations among personalities grouping them together. Personality traits have implications for mate choice, fitness, and predator avoidance. In Chapter 2, we addressed behavioral traits and personality in females and whether they influence how males respond to different degrees of boldness, activity, and aggression. We assessed female latency time to emerge from a refuge chamber, activity level, and aggressiveness to another female, on three successive days. We then quantified the degree of mating harassment each female experienced, when tested with a male. We hypothesized the following: 1) female G. metallicus exhibit personality across behavioral contexts (risk, activity, and resource competition), consistent with findings in other poeciliids including male G. metallicus; 2) the rank orders of boldness, activity, and aggression are positively correlated, consistent with other poeciliid studies that found evidence for behavioral syndromes; and 3) female personality traits mitigate male harassment because females that exhibit those personality traits are better at avoiding/retaliating against male harassment. We predicted that: 1) behavioral traits (latency time to emerge, boxes entered, and chases, bites, and fin flares delivered to a female competitor) measured within each context would be repeatable; 2) female rank orders of boldness, activity, and aggression personalities would be positively correlated with each other; 3) that larger females would experience less harassment; and 4) when females directly interact with a male, females that are bolder, more active, and more aggressive (bites and chases delivered to the male) are better able to mitigate male harassment. We found support for the hypothesis that some behavioral traits are repeatable in females; however, we found no evidence for behavioral syndromes. We found evidence to suggest that females that are less bold and less aggressive received less mating harassment from males, possibly because those females are of lower quality and not as attractive to males. Our most novel finding in this study was that activity and aggression were both consistent behavioral traits in females, and therefore constitute personalities; however, these personalities did not have a correlation grouping them together into a behavioral syndrome. Maybe there is a tradeoff: good females are bold and aggressive and get more food, but receive more mating harassment, whereas bad females are submissive and get less food, but avoid mating harassment.
5

Predator Inspection and Social Information Usage in the Sexually Dimorphic Livebearing Fish Xiphophorus helleri

Hamrick, Neil F. 01 June 2021 (has links)
No description available.

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