Para acceder a los documentos con el texto completo, por favor, siga el siguiente enlace: http://hdl.handle.net/10459.1/48894

Is sexual size dimorphism similar irrespective of the origin of the goose breed?
Parés Casanova, Pere-Miquel
Sexual dimorphism, defined as a phenotypic difference between males and females of a particular species, is a common phenomenon in animals. Rensch's rule describes the pattern of sexual size dimorphism (SSD) and claims that larger species generally exhibit higher male to female body size ratios. Domesticated animals offer excellent opportunities for testing predictions of functional explanations of Rensch's theory. In this paper, predictions were tested in geese by evaluating SSD in 70 breeds of domestic geese from different geographic origins (34 from Asian origin and 36 from European origin) which were compared to their wild relatives (genus Anser, 12 species). The data indicated that the body mass of different goose breeds were consistent with the Rensch's rule, where the allometry of SSD was significantly positive. Second, despite varying selective forces, scaling of SSD with body mass did not diverge according to breed origins (Anser anser and A. cygnoides groups).
-Anser anser
-Anser cygnoides
-Domestication
-Sexual size dimorphism
-Dimorfisme sexual en els animals
-Sexual dimorphism (Animals)
(c) KPK Publishers, 2013
Artículo
Artículo - Versión publicada
KPK Publishers
         

Documentos con el texto completo de este documento

Ficheros Tamaño Formato Vista
020452.pdf 193.9 KB application/pdf Vista/Abrir

Mostrar el registro completo del ítem

Documentos relacionados

Otros documentos del mismo autor/a