INVESTIGADORES
LEIVA Pamela Maria De Lujan
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Body Condition Analysis Over Time in Caiman latirostris
Autor/es:
EVANGELINA VIOTTO; P. M. L. LEIVA; HERNÁN CIOCAN; MELINA SIMONCINI; CARLOS I. PIÑA.
Lugar:
Santa Fe
Reunión:
Congreso; XXV Working Meeting CSG-UICN; 2018
Institución organizadora:
CSG-UICN
Resumen:
Climatic variables can affect the body condition (BC) of individuals because theydirectly influence the natural environment by modifying the availability of food. BC isan indicator of nutritional reserves; it can be calculated using indices that relate size andweight, which can be directly related to environmental parameters such as precipitationand temperature. We could then assume that, within a population, reproductive femaleswould possess the best BC, since they should provide part of their energy to producingtheir progeny (at a high energy cost). In addition, the BC of reproductive females, likethat of the rest of the population, would be affected by climatic variables. Using theBody Condition Index Scaled Mass Index (SMI) we compare the BC betweenreproductive (R) and nonreproductive (NR) individuals, and whether there weredifferences in BC between years, and if those differences could be explained by climaticvariables. We calculated the SMI for 335 individuals of C. latirostris captured from2001 to 2016, in the province of Santa Fe (Argentina). We classify the animals in NR(n=262): Class I, II, III (males and non-breeding females -proven by ultrasonography-)and class IV; and R (n=73): class III females with eggs (verified by ultrasonography)and females found next to their nests. We analyze the data using analysis of varianceand principal component analysis. We observed that the average population BC was4.35 (max:6.90; min:1.92; CV=16.08). The R's BC was greater than the rest of thepopulation (p