Volume 44, Issue 6 pp. 1490-1497
Article
Free Access

GENETIC VARIATION AND TERRITORIALITY IN WILLOW PTARMIGAN (LAGOPUS LAGOPUS LAGOPUS)

Kjell-Arne Rørvik

Kjell-Arne Rørvik

Department of Biology, Division of General Genetics, University of Oslo, P.b. 1031, Blindern, N-0315 Oslo 3, NORWAY

Present address: Institute of Aquaculture Research, P.b. 10, N-1432 Ås-NLH, Norway.Search for more papers by this author
Hans Christian Pedersen

Hans Christian Pedersen

Department of Zoology, University of Trondheim, N-7055 Dragvoll, NORWAY

Present address: Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, Tungasletta 2, N-7004 Trondheim, Norway.Search for more papers by this author
Johan B. Steen

Johan B. Steen

Department of Biology, Division of General Physiology, University of Oslo, P.b. 1051, Blindern, N-0315 Oslo 3, NORWAY

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First published: September 1990
Citations: 2

Abstract

We examined eight polymorphic esterase loci in 526 juvenile and adult willow ptarmigan (Lagopus lagopus lagopus) collected during autumn and spring over five years. The genetic structure of territorial birds during spring differed from birds on the study area in autumn. This can not be explained by selective winter mortality since juvenile birds in the autumn had the same genetic structure as the adults who had lived through at least one winter.

In the spring, birds with intermediate heterozygosity had the largest territories and were more frequently mated than expected from random mating among autumn birds. The results suggest selective access to territories by genotype and stabilizing selection, especially among males, since natural selection is assumed to favor large territories and reproduction. Our data also suggest that the spring population consisted of both territorial and non-territorial birds. The genetic relationship between birds of established pairs in spring was lower than that between randomly drawn birds on the study area in the autumn. This together with the finding that parents with an intermediate level of genetic relationship produced the largest broods, suggest that optimal rather than maximal outbreeding is the most successful breeding strategy in this species.

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