A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Heritability, plasticity and canalization of Ural owl egg size in a cyclic environment




AuthorsKontiainen P, Brommer JE, Karell P, Pietiainen H

PublisherBLACKWELL PUBLISHING

Publication year2008

Journal:Journal of Evolutionary Biology

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY

Journal acronymJ EVOLUTION BIOL

Volume21

Issue1

First page 88

Last page96

Number of pages9

ISSN1010-061X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/j.1420-9101.2007.01468.x


Abstract
Avian egg size is highly variable on the population level, but is considered inflexible on the individual level. On the basis of 2969 measurements of individual eggs collected during 1981-2005, we analysed heritability, plasticity and selection on egg size in the Ural owl, a long-lived bird that preys on voles. Vole abundance varied in a 3-year cycle, creating varying food supply across the cycle's phases. Ural owl egg size is heritable (h(2) = 60%). Ural owls lay larger eggs in improved food conditions. On the basis of repeated breeding records of 59 females that bred in all vole cycle phases, we show that intra-individual adjustment (plasticity) explained 22.4% of the variation in egg size across phases. Egg size was under stabilizing selection. Extremely small and extremely large eggs had reduced hatchability, and individuals who laid either large or small eggs had lower lifetime fledgling production than the ones laying intermediately sized eggs. Our findings illustrate how maternal investment in egg size can both be heritable and highly responsive to variable environmental conditions, and suggest that variation in the investment in egg size across individuals is canalized.



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