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dc.creatorMüller, H. G.en
dc.creatorWu, S.en
dc.creatorDiamantidis, A. D.en
dc.creatorPapadopoulos, N. T.en
dc.creatorCarey, J. R.en
dc.date.accessioned2015-11-23T10:40:04Z
dc.date.available2015-11-23T10:40:04Z
dc.date.issued2009
dc.identifier10.1098/rspb.2009.1461
dc.identifier.issn9628452
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11615/31201
dc.description.abstractWe propose the hypothesis that individual longitudinal trajectories of fertility are closely coupled to varying survival schedules across geographically isolated populations of the same species, in such a way that peak reproduction takes place before substantial increases in mortality are observed. This reproductive adaptation hypothesis is investigated for medflies through a statistical analysis of biodemographic data that were obtained for female medflies from six geographically far apart regions. The following results support the hypothesis: (i) both survival and reproductive schedules differ substantially between these populations, where early peaks and subsequently fast declining reproduction are observed for shortlived and protracted reproductive schedules for long-lived flies; (ii) when statistically adjusting reproduction for the observed differences in survival, the differences in reproductive schedules largely vanish, and thus the observed differences in fertility across the populations can be explained by differences in population-specific longevity; and (iii) specific survival patterns of the medflies belonging to a specific population predict the individual reproductive schedule for the flies in this population. The analysis is based on innovative statistical tools from functional data analysis. Our findings are consistent with an adaptive mechanism whereby trajectories of fertility evolve in response to specific constraints inherent in the population survival schedules. © 2009 The Royal Society.en
dc.source.urihttp://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-72749115919&partnerID=40&md5=ff7483b3cfdfe1f0ec5cdfcedbb2710c
dc.subjectBiodemographyen
dc.subjectFertilityen
dc.subjectFunctional data analysisen
dc.subjectFunctional regressionen
dc.subjectIsolated populationsen
dc.subjectMedflyen
dc.subjectadaptationen
dc.subjectdata acquisitionen
dc.subjectdemographyen
dc.subjectflyen
dc.subjectisolated populationen
dc.subjectmortalityen
dc.subjectregression analysisen
dc.subjectreproductive behavioren
dc.subjectstatistical analysisen
dc.subjectsurvivalen
dc.subjectarticleen
dc.subjectbiotypeen
dc.subjectevolutionary adaptationen
dc.subjectgeographic distributionen
dc.subjectgeographical variation (species)en
dc.subjectlongevityen
dc.subjectMediterranean fruit flyen
dc.subjectnonhumanen
dc.subjectpriority journalen
dc.subjectreproductionen
dc.subjectAdaptation, Biologicalen
dc.subjectAnalysis of Varianceen
dc.subjectAnimalsen
dc.subjectCeratitis capitataen
dc.subjectFemaleen
dc.subjectGeographyen
dc.subjectLinear Modelsen
dc.subjectModels, Biologicalen
dc.subjectPrincipal Component Analysisen
dc.titleReproduction is adapted to survival characteristics across geographically isolated medfly populationsen
dc.typejournalArticleen


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