. . "First grow, then breed and finally get fat: hierarchical allocation to life-history traits in a lizard with invariant clutch size"@en . "First grow, then breed and finally get fat: hierarchical allocation to life-history traits in a lizard with invariant clutch size" . . . "In a laboratory experiment, we manipulated diet in adult females of the Madagascar ground gecko Paroedura picta. Both food-limited and well-fed females followed the same growth trajectory in body and head length. In contrast, allocation to reproduction was highly nutrition-dependent. Although females in both treatment groups reproduced, food-limited females compromised both quantity and quality of their progeny: they laid clutches of smaller eggs in longer intervals. Fat storage was formed only in well-fed females. We propose that the results are best explained by the consecutive hierarchical allocation of resources to growth, reproduction and storage, and discuss the consequences for investigation of life-history trade-offs."@en . . "Kratochv\u00EDl, Luk\u00E1\u0161" . . "11310" . "000266024900016" . . "Phenotypic plasticity; reproductive traits; sex determination; offspring size; lacerta-agilis; sand lizard; trade-offs; gecko; paroedura; eggs"@en . . . "RIV/00216208:11310/09:10000766!RIV10-MSM-11310___" . . . . "3" . "315123" . . "RIV/00216208:11310/09:10000766" . . . . "2"^^ . "Functional Ecology" . . "First grow, then breed and finally get fat: hierarchical allocation to life-history traits in a lizard with invariant clutch size"@en . . "Kubi\u010Dka, Luk\u00E1\u0161" . "7"^^ . . "2"^^ . . "First grow, then breed and finally get fat: hierarchical allocation to life-history traits in a lizard with invariant clutch size" . "P(KJB601110706), Z(MSM0021620828)" . . . . "0269-8463" . "23" . . "[F9039624F493]" . "In a laboratory experiment, we manipulated diet in adult females of the Madagascar ground gecko Paroedura picta. Both food-limited and well-fed females followed the same growth trajectory in body and head length. In contrast, allocation to reproduction was highly nutrition-dependent. Although females in both treatment groups reproduced, food-limited females compromised both quantity and quality of their progeny: they laid clutches of smaller eggs in longer intervals. Fat storage was formed only in well-fed females. We propose that the results are best explained by the consecutive hierarchical allocation of resources to growth, reproduction and storage, and discuss the consequences for investigation of life-history trade-offs." . . "GB - Spojen\u00E9 kr\u00E1lovstv\u00ED Velk\u00E9 Brit\u00E1nie a Severn\u00EDho Irska" .