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Relative tail length correlates with body condition in male but not in female crowned leafnose snakes (Lytorhynchus diadema).


ABSTRACT: Reproductive success is the ultimate measure of individual quality; however, it is difficult to determine in free-living animals. Therefore, indirect measures that are related to reproduction are generally employed. In snakes, males typically possess longer tails than females and this sexual size dimorphism in tail length (TL) has generally been attributed to the importance of the tail in mating and reproduction. Thus, intra-sexual differences in tail length, specifically within males, were hypothesized to reflect individual quality. We used a body condition index (BCI) as a measure of quality in snakes and predicted that tail length would be correlated with BCI in males. We tested our prediction by determining BCI in the free-ranging adult male and female crowned leafnose snake (Lytorhynchus diadema), a colubrid species that inhabits mainly desert sand dunes. The relative TL was correlated positively and significantly to BCI in males (F1,131?=?11.05; r2adj?=?0.07; P?

SUBMITTER: Sivan J 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7058055 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Relative tail length correlates with body condition in male but not in female crowned leafnose snakes (Lytorhynchus diadema).

Sivan Jaim J   Hadad Shlomo S   Tesler Itay I   Rosenstrauch Avi A   Allan Degen Abraham A   Kam Michael M  

Scientific reports 20200305 1


Reproductive success is the ultimate measure of individual quality; however, it is difficult to determine in free-living animals. Therefore, indirect measures that are related to reproduction are generally employed. In snakes, males typically possess longer tails than females and this sexual size dimorphism in tail length (TL) has generally been attributed to the importance of the tail in mating and reproduction. Thus, intra-sexual differences in tail length, specifically within males, were hypo  ...[more]

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