The brown anole dewlap revisited: do predation pressure, sexual selection, and species recognition shape among-population signal diversity?

Author:

Baeckens Simon12ORCID,Driessens Tess1,Van Damme Raoul1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Functional Morphology, Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Wilrijk, Belgium

2. Museum of Comparative Zoology, Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA

Abstract

Animal signalling structures are amongst the most variable characteristics, as they are subjected to a diversity of selection pressures. A well-known example of a diverse signalling system in the animal kingdom is the dewlap ofAnolislizards. Dewlap characteristics can vary remarkably among and within species, and also between sexes. Although a considerable amount of studies have attempted to disentangle the functional significance of the staggering dewlap diversity inAnolis, the underlying evolutionary processes remain elusive. In this study, we focus on the contribution of biotic selective pressures in shaping geographic variation in dewlap design (size, colour, and pattern) and dewlap display behaviour at the intraspecific level. Notably, we have tried to replicate and extend previously reported results hereof in both sexes of the brown anole lizard (Anolis sagrei). To do this, we assembled a dataset consisting of 17A. sagreiheterogeneous island populations from the Caribbean and specifically tested whether predation pressure, sexual selection, or species recognition could explain interpopulational variation in an array of dewlap characteristics. Our findings show that in neither males nor females estimates of predation pressure (island size, tail break frequency, model attack rate, presence of predatoryLeiocephaluslizards) or sexual selection (sexual size dimorphism) could explain variation in dewlap design. We did find thatA. sagreimales from larger islands showed higher dewlap display intensities than males from smaller islands, but the direct connection with predation pressure remains ambiguous and demands further investigation. Last, we could show indirect support for species recognition only in males, as they are more likely to have a ‘spotted’ dewlap pattern when co-occurring with a higher number of syntopicAnolisspecies. In conclusion, we found overall limited support for the idea that the extensive interpopulational variability in dewlap design and use inA. sagreiis mediated by variation in their biotic environment. We propose a variety of conceptual and methodological explanations for this unexpected finding.

Funder

Research Fund Flanders (FWO)

Belgian American Education Foundation (B.A.E.F.)

Leopold III

University of Antwerp (DOCOP)

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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