Abstract
Abstract
Sexual signals serve as an honest indicator of individual quality,
reflecting either developmental and/or maintenance costs. A possible underlying
physiological mechanism is oxidative stress, which could mediate energy trade-offs
between sexual signals and other quality traits. In ectotherms, thermal performance
acts as a key indicator of individual quality and influence signal intensity. We
investigated how oxidative state is reflected in visual signals of lizards from
different thermal habitats. According to our hypothesis, efficient thermoregulation
requires different strategies in different thermal environments. In a habitat with
predictable temperature changes, animals are less exposed to suboptimal temperature
ranges and selection will, therefore, be stronger on the maximum oxidative damage at
optimal body temperature. Contrarily, in a habitat with rather stochastic thermal
shifts, individuals are often constricted by suboptimal thermal conditions, and
oxidative damage can be limiting on a wide temperature range. We used Iberolacerta cyreni and Psammodromus algirus inhabiting stochastic and predictable thermal
environments respectively. We examined two aspects of oxidative stress: the level of
reactive oxygen metabolites at the preferred temperature (maximal ROM) and the
temperature range in which animals produce at least 80% of the maximum level of
reactive oxygen metabolites (effective ROM range). In I.
cyreni, we found that duller coloration was related to a wider
effective ROM range, while expression of coloration in P.
algirus was negatively correlated with the maximal ROM. Our results
suggest that different thermal constraints affect different aspects of oxidative
damage which can indicate individual quality and are, therefore, represented in
sexual ornaments.
Funder
Ministerio Economía e Innovación
Hungarian Scientific
Research Fund
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Medicine,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
9 articles.
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