Authors
Claude Miaud, Franco Andreone, Alexandre Ribéron, Sara De Michelis, Valentina Clima, Jacques Castanet, Hélène Francillon-Vieillot, Robert Guyétant
Publication date
2001/6
Journal
Journal of Zoology
Volume
254
Issue
2
Pages
251-260
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Description
We describe the age structures of two neighbouring terrestrial salamander populations. The skeletochronological method was also used on larvae in utero and on new-born individuals. The age of adults was 8–24 years in population A, while males reached maturity at 3–5 years old and the youngest females were 6 years old in population B. Males and females from population B were also larger than those in population A. For the first time, lines of arrested growth (LAGs) were also found in the humerus of intra-uterine larvae and new-born individuals, indicating that young can spend up to 3 years in utero (population B) and up to 4 years (population A) before hatching. Growth of adults (fitted by the Bertalanffy model) also exhibited differences in growth coefficient (k) and mean asymptotic length (SVLmax) between sexes and populations. Local climatic conditions differed between the two areas of these populations …
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