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Brown Treesnake mating and reproductive success on Guam, 2004-2018

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2004-01-01
End Date
2018-01-01

Citation

Levine, B.A., and Yackel Adams, A.A., 2021, Brown Treesnake mating and reproductive success on Guam, 2004-2018: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9X1AKVJ.

Summary

The mating and reproductive ecology of the invasive Brown Treesnake (Boiga irregularis) were generated by reconstructing a multigenerational genomic pedigree based on 654 single nucleotide polymorphisms for a geographically-closed population established in 2004 on Guam (N=426). The pedigree allowed annual estimates of individual mating and reproductive success to be inferred for snakes in the study population over a 14-year period. These data are then merged with morphological data on each snake.

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Brown Treesnake mating and reproductive success on Guam.csv 90.03 KB text/csv

Purpose

Brown Treesnake DNA samples were collected to reconstruct genomic pedigrees to allow patterns of mating and reproductive success to be inferred in the wild. Two reproductive ecology parameters critical to development of successful invasive species control are the number of offspring that an individual produces annually (referred to here as annual reproductive success; ARS) and the number of mates with which an individual produces offspring annually (referred to here as annual mating success; AMS). Quantification of average ARS in an invasive species yields an important estimate of the annual ability of a population to replenish itself.

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  • Fort Collins Science Center (FORT)
  • USGS Data Release Products

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DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9X1AKVJ

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