Zoology - Theses

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    Life-history strategies of five species of intertidal limpet
    Parry, Gregory Douglas ( 1977)
    The life-long strategies of five species of intertidal limpet, Cellana tramoserica, Notoacmea petterdi, Patella peroni, Patelloida alticostata, and Siphonaria diemenensis, which occur on the same shore but in different tidal zones, are considered in relation to their different environments. Attention is focused upon reproductive effort, which is defined as the percentage of assimilated energy devoted to reproduction, and which is measured for each species by using annual energy budgets. Environmental and demographic factors, which previous workers have suggested may have important influences on the level of reproductive effort, are investigated. In particular, interspecific differences in reproductive effort are compared with differences in the availability of food resources, differences in the magnitude of density-independent causes of mortality, differences in adult mortality rates and differences in extrinsic adult mortality rates (i.e. the adult mortality rates that would occur in the absence of expenditure of energy in reproduction.) The results of the present study indicate that reproductive effort is correlated with the availability of food resources, but that the primary determinant of the optimum level of reproductive effort is the rate of extrinsic adult mortality.
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    Aspects of the reproductive endocrinology of the echidna, Tachyglossus aculeatus
    Dean, Karen Marie ( 2000)
    This thesis investigated some aspects of the reproductive endocrinology the shortbeaked-echidna, Tachyglossus aculeatus. Measurements of seasonal changes in plasma steroid testosterone and corticosteroids were made in captive and free-ranging male echidnas. Non-invasive faecal sampling techniques were developed as an alternative to blood sampling for measuring endocrinological changes in both sexes. This thesis focussed on male reproduction for two reasons. First, it has long been suggested that female echidnas do not breed every year and will enter periods of torpor or inactivity during the breeding season if they are non-breeding (Broom, 1895; Griffiths, 1968; Rismiller, 1992; Rismiller and McKelvey, 1996). Males, however, are generally more active during the breeding season and have been observed to actively seek out females moving from train to train (Rismiller, 1992), thus making them easier subjects for study. Secondly, none of the females used for the blood sampling study were observed to mate or produce young during the course of the study, so making it difficult to adequately describe female reproduction in terms of the changes that occur in plasma concentrations of steroids. (From Abstract)