Chemical signaling glands are unlinked to species diversification in lizards

Author:

Murali Gopal123ORCID,Meiri Shai4ORCID,Roll Uri2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Jacob Blaustein Center for Scientific Cooperation, The Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev , Midreshet Ben-Gurion , Israel

2. Mitrani Department of Desert Ecology, The Swiss Institute for Dryland Environments and Energy Research, The Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev , Midreshet Ben-Gurion , Israel

3. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona , Tucson, AZ , United States

4. School of Zoology and The Steinhardt Museum of Natural History, Tel Aviv University , Tel Aviv, Beersheva, Sede-Boqer Campus, 8499000 , Israel

Abstract

Abstract Sexual selection has long been thought to increase species diversification. Sexually selected traits, such as sexual signals that contribute to reproductive isolation, were thought to promote diversification. However, studies exploring links between sexually selected traits and species diversification have thus far primarily focused on visual or acoustic signals. Many animals often employ chemical signals (i.e., pheromones) for sexual communications, but large-scale analyses on the role of chemical communications in driving species diversification have been missing. Here, for the first time, we investigate whether traits associated with chemical communications—the presence of follicular epidermal glands—promote diversification across 6,672 lizard species. In most analyses, we found no strong association between the presence of follicular epidermal glands and species diversification rates, either across all lizard species or at lower phylogenetic scales. Previous studies suggest that follicular gland secretions act as species recognition signals that prevent hybridization during speciation in lizards. However, we show that geographic range overlap was no different in sibling species pairs with and without follicular epidermal glands. Together, these results imply that either follicular epidermal glands do not primarily function in sexual communications or sexually selected traits in general (here chemical communication) have a limited effect on species diversification. In our additional analysis accounting for sex-specific differences in glands, we again found no detectable effect of follicular epidermal glands on species diversification rates. Thus, our study challenges the general role of sexually selected traits in broad-scale species diversification patterns.

Funder

Israel Science Foundation

Swiss Institute of Dryland Environmental

Energy Research Postdoctoral

Planning and Budgeting Committee

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference136 articles.

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3. Diverge: Evolutionary trait divergence between sister species and other paired lineages;Anderson,2021

4. Selection on male sex pheromone composition contributes to butterfly reproductive isolation;Bacquet;Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences,2015

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