Population differences in multimodal lizard communication are not well explained by habitat or history

IF 1.3 4区 生物学 Q4 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Ethology Pub Date : 2023-08-25 DOI:10.1111/eth.13402
Cristina Romero-Diaz, Bryce R. Wetherell, Danielle Ury, Mikayla Reuter, Jake A. Pruett, Emília P. Martins, Alison G. Ossip-Drahos
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Abstract

Animals evolve in complex selective regimes, where a suite of different factors can shape signal use. We might predict that more closely related species will exhibit more similar behavior than those more distantly related; however, sometimes signals are shaped more profoundly by the environment or other forces. Lizards in the genus Sceloporus communicate with conspecifics with multimodal signals that combine species-typical push-up and headbob displays and chemical signals in the form of femoral gland secretions. Here, we examine behavioral activity and signal use across three closely related populations of the Sceloporus undulatus species complex from diverse habitats across the United States, to test the relative roles of habitat and phylogeography in shaping communicative behavior. We filmed undisturbed levels of activity for free-ranging males of S. consobrinus, syn. S. u. erythrocheilus, in Colorado, S. undulatus hyacinthinus in Indiana and S. u. undulatus in Georgia, and scored frequency and rates of behavior important for communication. We found that populations differed in their use of communicative signals in a way that deviates from expectations based solely on phylogeographic proximity or habitat, suggesting that plasticity or adaptation to conditions that vary among populations may be especially important. Specifically, canonical discriminant analyses found the largest differences in movement patterns. Sceloporus u. hyacinthinus was the most behaviorally different out of the three: males in this population had lower movement rates and particularly low levels of chemosensory behavior while male S. consobrinus and S. u. undulatus showed similar rates of chemosensory acts and headbob/push-up displays. Phenotypic and environmental variation among closely related populations, in combination with phylogeographic knowledge can help us untangle the processes responsible for the origin and maintenance of organismal diversity in communicative behavior.

Abstract Image

多模态蜥蜴交流的种群差异不能很好地用栖息地或历史来解释
动物在复杂的选择机制中进化,其中一系列不同的因素可以决定信号的使用。我们可以预测近亲物种会比远亲物种表现出更多的相似行为;然而,有时信号受到环境或其他力量的影响更为深远。蜥蜴属的蜥蜴通过多模态信号与同种生物交流,这些信号结合了物种典型的俯卧撑和头摇显示以及以股腺分泌物形式的化学信号。在这里,我们研究了来自美国不同栖息地的三个密切相关的波状斑孔虫种群的行为活动和信号使用,以测试栖息地和系统地理在塑造交流行为中的相对作用。我们拍摄了自由放养的雄性consobrinus,也就是美国红头美国,在科罗拉多州,在印第安纳州和乔治亚州的波状美国风信子,在不受干扰的情况下的活动水平,并记录了对交流重要的行为频率和比率。我们发现种群在使用交流信号方面的差异与仅仅基于系统地理接近或栖息地的预期不同,这表明可塑性或对不同种群条件的适应可能特别重要。具体来说,规范判别分析发现了运动模式的最大差异。在三种种群中,风信子螺的行为差异最大:该种群的雄性运动率较低,特别是化学感觉行为水平较低,而雄性consobrinus和波状螺的化学感觉行为和头波波/俯卧起坐行为的比例相似。亲缘关系密切的种群之间的表型和环境差异,结合系统地理学知识,可以帮助我们理清负责交流行为中生物多样性起源和维持的过程。
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来源期刊
Ethology
Ethology 生物-动物学
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
5.90%
发文量
89
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: International in scope, Ethology publishes original research on behaviour including physiological mechanisms, function, and evolution. The Journal addresses behaviour in all species, from slime moulds to humans. Experimental research is preferred, both from the field and the lab, which is grounded in a theoretical framework. The section ''Perspectives and Current Debates'' provides an overview of the field and may include theoretical investigations and essays on controversial topics.
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