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Ecology, management and conservation in natural and modified habitats
RESEARCH ARTICLE

population ecology of the Australian frog Crinia signifera: egg-laying patterns and egg mortality

I Williamson and CM Bull

Wildlife Research 21(6) 621 - 631
Published: 1994

Abstract

There are few studies of embryo mortality in anurans, and most of these studies deal with anurans that deposit clutches as one egg mass. In this study, egg mortality in Crinia signifera, an anuran that distributes its clutches in small clusters of eggs, was examined with the aims of: (i) determining overall mortality levels, and (ii) determining whether there was significant variation in success between clutches laid by different females. Hatching success varied significantly between years and between habitats, and was as low as 2% in some habitats in some years. Fungal infection caused most mortality, and hatching success was higher in temporary pools than in a permanent water body. Although significant variation in clutch success between females could occur if clutches were laid in different habitats or at different times, it was not clear whether there would be significant variation in clutch success between females laying simultaneously in the same water body. Differences in success of clutches might occur if females distributed eggs at different depths or in different-sized clusters. However, information on inter-female variation in these components of egg-laying behaviour in C. signifera is currently unavailable.

https://doi.org/10.1071/WR9940621

© CSIRO 1994

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