Proximate and ultimate drivers of variation in bite force in the insular lizards Podarcis melisellensis and Podarcis sicula

Author:

Taverne Maxime1ORCID,King-Gillies Nina1,Krajnović Maria2,Lisičić Duje2,Mira Óscar2,Petricioli Donat3,Sabolić Iva2,Štambuk Anamaria2,Tadić Zoran2,Vigliotti Chloé1,Wehrle Beck4,Herrel Anthony1

Affiliation:

1. Département Adaptations du Vivant, Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris, France

2. Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia

3. D.I.I.V. Ltd, for Marine, Freshwater and Subterranean Ecology, Sali, Croatia

4. Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, CA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Bite force is a key performance trait in lizards because biting is involved in many ecologically relevant tasks, including foraging, fighting and mating. Several factors have been suggested to impact bite force in lizards, such as head morphology (proximate factors), or diet, intraspecific competition and habitat characteristics (ultimate factors). However, these have been generally investigated separately and mostly at the interspecific level. Here we tested which factors drive variation in bite force at the population level and to what extent. Our study includes 20 populations of two closely related lacertid species, Podarcis melisellensis and Podarcis sicula, which inhabit islands in the Adriatic. We found that lizards with more forceful bites have relatively wider and taller heads, and consume more hard prey and plant material. Island isolation correlates with bite force, probably by driving resource availability. Bite force is only poorly explained by proxies of intraspecific competition. The linear distance from a large island and the proportion of difficult-to-reduce food items consumed are the ultimate factors that explain most of the variation in bite force. Our findings suggest that the way in which morphological variation affects bite force is species-specific, probably reflecting the different selective pressures operating on the two species.

Funder

National Geographic

Sorbonne Universités

Croatian Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference120 articles.

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