GROWTH AND AGE OF ALBERTA LONG-TOED SALAMANDERS (AMBYSTOMA-MACRODACTYLUM-KRAUSEI) - A COMPARISON OF 2 METHODS OF ESTIMATION

Citation
Ap. Russell et al., GROWTH AND AGE OF ALBERTA LONG-TOED SALAMANDERS (AMBYSTOMA-MACRODACTYLUM-KRAUSEI) - A COMPARISON OF 2 METHODS OF ESTIMATION, Canadian journal of zoology, 74(3), 1996, pp. 397-412
Citations number
61
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00084301
Volume
74
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
397 - 412
Database
ISI
SICI code
0008-4301(1996)74:3<397:GAAOAL>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
Both skeletochronology and a somatic growth model based upon mark-reca pture data were used to estimate life-span and the relationship betwee n size and age in two populations of long-toed salamanders (Ambystoma macrodactylum krausei) in the upper Bow Valley of southwestern Alberta . Skeletochronologically aged salamanders (n = 170) displayed a sigmoi dal relationship between snout-vent length and age, with a great deal of variation in snout-vent length within each year class. The modified logistic-by-mass somatic growth model (based upon 47 recaptures) pred icted sexual maturity at 3 years of age and adult size at 6 years, wit h asymptotic length approached at 15 years of age. These predictions w ere falsified by skeletochronology, which indicated that a snout-vent length characteristic of sexual maturity could be reached by 2 years a nd adult size by 3 years of age, and that the maximum life-span attain ed was 10 years, with most individuals living 6 years at most. Conside rable variation in growth, evidently due to factors other than simple age, is displayed among individuals in these populations. Their demogr aphic characteristics suggest that the skeletochronologically determin ed maximum age is real and not due to a cessation of growth, and thus of bone deposition, in these salamanders.