OBSTINATE NATURE - AN ECOLOGY OF INDIVIDUALS - THOUGHTS ON REPRODUCTIVE-BEHAVIOR AND BIODIVERSITY

Authors
Citation
P. Cury, OBSTINATE NATURE - AN ECOLOGY OF INDIVIDUALS - THOUGHTS ON REPRODUCTIVE-BEHAVIOR AND BIODIVERSITY, Canadian journal of fisheries and aquatic sciences, 51(7), 1994, pp. 1664-1673
Citations number
106
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology",Fisheries
ISSN journal
0706652X
Volume
51
Issue
7
Year of publication
1994
Pages
1664 - 1673
Database
ISI
SICI code
0706-652X(1994)51:7<1664:ON-AEO>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
Marine turtles, salmon, and many other marine and terrestrial animals exhibit similar reproductive strategies in which the adults return to the site of their birth (''natal homing''). For these species, imprint ing is the basic mechanism that allows every individual to place its p rogeny in an environment geographically similar to the one experienced at an early life stage. A tentative generalization of ''natal homing' ' is presented within which homing is viewed as part of a continuum of reproductive strategies, all relying on imprinting. This generalizati on postulates that a newborn individual memorizes early environmental cues, which later determine the choice of its reproductive environment . Thus, the same mechanism accounts for successive generations reprodu cing at the same geographic location (philopatry) or aiming at a movin g target, i.e., a set of environmental conditions that do not always h ave the same earth coordinates (dispersal). As a consequence, the adap tability of a population to its environment is ensured because of the diversity and multitude of imprinted individuals and not because of th eir individual adaptability. Diversity of life is thus perhaps more im pressive than usually thought. Some ecological and evolutionary conseq uences of this generalization are explored and its application to mari ne fish discussed.