Synopsis
Widespread male body size variation in P. latipinna appears to be attributable to genetic variation in the size at maturation. The contribution of adult growth needs to be assessed because adult growth rates may vary with size at maturation and local environment. In our laboratory study we examined adult growth patterns as a function of size at maturation and juvenile experience (favorable or unfavorable conditions). In our field study we assessed adult growth as a function of initial size and environmental condition (using males in enclosures in contrasting habitats). Adult growth rates in the laboratory were an order of magnitude higher than rates observed in field enclosures. Growth rates varied with male size, increasing with increasing male size in the laboratory study but decreasing with increasing male size in the field study. The laboratory results alone would have cast considerable doubt on the ability to interpret size distributions of field-collected males, but the field results indicate that adult growth is sufficiently low that it can be ignored as a source of body size variation within and among populations.
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Travis, J., Farr, J.A., McManus, M. et al. Environmental effects on adult growth patterns in the male sailfin molly, Poecilia latipinna (Poeciliidae). Environ Biol Fish 26, 119–127 (1989). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00001028
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00001028