“…According to this view, small genomes are associated with r-selected traits, such as high colonizing ability, rapid individual and population growth, early maturation, high reproductive output and short lives that are favored in unstable or ephemeral habitats and at low population densities, whereas large genomes are associated with K-selected traits, such as high competitive ability, slower individual and population growth, late maturation, low reproductive output and long lives that are favored in stable habitats and at high population densities. Although the theory of r- and K-selection may help explain some variation in genome sizes (e.g., the association of large genomes with relatively slow growth rates and long lives in some protists, plants and ectothermic animals (e.g., [ 7 , 8 , 15 , 19 , 59 , 60 , 113 , 151 , 177 , 186 , 189 , 195 , 243 , 255 , 293 , 300 , 308 , 309 , 310 , 311 , 312 ]; but not in endothermic vertebrates [ 95 ]), and the association of relatively large genomes with larger, but fewer reproductive propagules ([ 146 , 166 , 217 , 219 , 313 , 314 ]; Table A2 ), it cannot explain why genome size covaries with body size in some taxa, but not others (as observed in Table 1 ).…”