William H. Bossert’s scientific contributions

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Publications (2)


Life history consequences of natural selection
  • Article

January 1970

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269 Reads

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1,474 Citations

The American Naturalist

Madhav Gadgil

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William H. Bossert

The tremendous variation in the life-history patterns of organisms is best explained as adaptive.any organism has a limited amount of resources at its disposal, and these have to be partitioned between reproductive and nonreproductive activities. A larger share of resources to reproductive activities, that is, a higher reproductive effort at any age, leads to a better reproductive performance at that age; this may be considered a as profit function. This reproductive effort also leads to a reduction in survival and growth and consequent diminution of the reproductive contribution of the succeeding stages in the life history; this may be considered as a cost function. Natural selection would tend to an adjustment of the reproductive effort at every age such that the overall fitness of the life history would be maximized. A model of life history processes has been developed on the basis of these considerations. It leads to the following predictions: 1. If the form of the profit function is convex, or that o...


Citations (2)


... In addition to the effects of 107 predation on morphological evolution, the guppy system has been key in developing and 108 testing concepts of life history evolution (Stearns 1989). It is generally assumed that natural 109 selection should favour maternal investment to produce larger numbers of offspring at a 110 relatively rapid pace in high mortality environments, compared to environments with low 111 mortality rates (Charlesworth 1994; Gadgil and Bossert 1970;Law 1979;Michod 1979). 112 Indeed, previous research shows that, compared to low-predation guppies, guppies from 113 high-predation habitats mature at an earlier age and at a smaller size, produce larger broods 114 with smaller offspring, have shorter interbrood intervals (defined as the number of days 115 between two births), and invest more into reproduction early in life (Reznick 1982(Reznick , 1989; 116 Reznick and Bryga 1996; Reznick and Endler 1982;Reznick, Rodd, and Cardenas 1996). ...

Reference:

Artificial selection for adult predation survival impacts life history and morphology in guppies (Poecilia reticulata)
Life historical consequences of natural selection
  • Citing Article
  • January 1970

The American Naturalist

... For yellow perch, k was generally the same between lake types but L∞ was similarly higher in RH-absent lakes (288.4) compared to RH-present lakes (280.8). Life history theory has also been used to predict how survival and age-atfirst reproduction respond to changes in growth rate (Gadgil and Bossert 1970;Roff 1984). While it is accepted that fecundity increases with size, there is a trade-off between present fecundity and future growth and fecundity (Roff et al. 2006). ...

Life history consequences of natural selection
  • Citing Article
  • January 1970

The American Naturalist