Sprint speeds of juvenile scorpions: among family differences and parent offspring correlations.

2000 
Sprinting from predators is an important part of the defensive repertoire of some scorpions. This study examined sprint speed in juvenile scorpions and its relation to sprint speed of the mothers. Sprint speeds of juvenile scorpions, Centruroides vittatus, were determined by repeated trials on a small racetrack. Speeds were repeatable across trials within individuals and differed among individuals. There were marked among family differences in juvenile sprint speeds. Juvenile sprint speeds were correlated with maternal sprint speeds. Although the effect of common maternal environment may inflate the measures of heritability to an unknown extent, these results suggest that sprint may respond to natural selection and there is an underlying genetic basis to observed performance differences among scorpions.
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