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1.
Conserv Biol ; 37(1): e13998, 2023 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36073314

RESUMEN

As the area covered by human-modified environments grows, it is increasingly important to understand the responses of communities to the novel habitats created, especially for sensitive and threatened taxa. We aimed to improve understanding of the major evolutionary and ecological processes that shape the assemblage of amphibian and reptile communities to forest modifications. To this end, we compiled a global data set of amphibian and reptile surveys in natural, disturbed (burned, logged), and transformed (monocultures, polyspecific plantations) forest communities to assess the richness, phylogenetic diversity, and composition of those communities, as well as the morphological disparity among taxa between natural and modified forest habitats. Forest transformations led to a diversity reduction of 15.46% relative to the statistically nonsignificant effect of disturbances. Transformations also led to a community composition that was 39.4% dissimilar to that on natural forests, compared with 16.1% difference in disturbances. Modifications did not affect the morphological disparity of communities (p = 0.167 and 0.744), and we found little evidence of taxon-specific responses to anthropic impacts. Monocultures and polyspecific plantations detrimentally affected the conservation and ecological value of both amphibian and reptile communities and altered the evolutionary processes shaping these communities, whereas forests with lower impact disturbances might, to some extent, serve as reservoirs of species. Although different mechanisms might buffer the collapse of herpetological communities, preserving remaining natural forests is necessary for conserving communities in the face of future anthropic pressures.


Con el aumento del área cubierta por entornos modificados por el humano, cada vez es más importante entender las respuestas que tienen las comunidades a los nuevos hábitats creados, especialmente en los taxones sensibles y amenazados. El objetivo de este estudio es mejorar el conocimiento sobre los principales procesos evolutivos y ecológicos que condicionan el ensamblado de las comunidades de anfibios y reptiles ante las modificaciones forestales. Con este fin, compilamos un conjunto de datos globales de los censos de anfibios y reptiles en las comunidades forestales naturales, perturbadas (taladas, incendiadas) y transformadas (monocultivos, plantaciones poliespecíficas) para valorar la riqueza, diversidad filogenética y composición de aquellas comunidades, así como la disparidad morfológica entre los taxones entre los hábitats forestales naturales y modificados. Las transformaciones forestales llevaron a una reducción de 15.46% de la diversidad en relación al efecto sin significancia estadística de las perturbaciones. Las transformaciones también derivaron en una composición comunitaria que fue 39.4% diferente a la de los bosques naturales, en comparación con el 16.1% de diferencia en las perturbaciones. Las modificaciones no afectaron la disparidad morfológica de las comunidades (p = 0.167 y 0.744) y no encontramos suficiente evidencia de respuestas específicas por taxón a los impactos antrópicos. Los monocultivos y las plantaciones poliespecíficas afectaron negativamente a la conservación y al valor ecológico de las comunidades de anfibios y reptiles y alteraron los procesos evolutivos que condicionan a estas comunidades, mientras que los bosques menos impactados podrían, hasta cierto punto, actuar como reservorios de especies. Sin embargo, mientras que diferentes mecanismos pueden amortiguar el colapso de las comunidades herpetológicas, se requiere la conservación de los bosques naturales para preservar las comunidades que se enfrentarán a presiones antrópicas.


Asunto(s)
Biodiversidad , Conservación de los Recursos Naturales , Animales , Anfibios , Ecosistema , Agricultura Forestal , Bosques , Filogenia , Reptiles
2.
J Evol Biol ; 35(11): 1508-1523, 2022 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36177770

RESUMEN

Visual ornaments have long been assumed to evolve hyper-allometry as an outcome of sexual selection. Yet growing evidence suggests many sexually selected morphologies can exhibit other scaling patterns with body size, including hypo-allometry. The large conspicuous throat fan, or dewlap, of arboreal Caribbean Anolis lizards was one ornament previously thought to conform to the classical expectation of hyper-allometry. We re-evaluated this classic example alongside a second arboreal group of lizards that has also independently evolved a functionally equivalent dewlap, the Southeast Asian Draco lizards. Across multiple closely related species in both genera, the Anolis and Draco dewlaps were either isometric or had hypo-allometric scaling patterns. In the case of the Anolis dewlap, variation in dewlap allometry was predicted by the distance of conspecifics and the light environment in which the dewlap was typically viewed. Signal efficacy, therefore, appears to have driven the evolution of hypo-allometry in what was originally thought to be a sexually selected ornament with hyper-allometry. Our findings suggest that other elaborate morphological structures used in social communication might similarly exhibit isometric or hypo-allometric scaling patterns because of environmental constraints on signal detection.


Asunto(s)
Lagartos , Animales , Región del Caribe , Selección Sexual , Tamaño Corporal , Comunicación , Árboles
3.
Ecol Lett ; 24(9): 1750-1761, 2021 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34196091

RESUMEN

Convergence in communication appears rare compared with other forms of adaptation. This is puzzling, given communication is acutely dependent on the environment and expected to converge in form when animals communicate in similar habitats. We uncover deep-time convergence in territorial communication between two groups of tropical lizards separated by over 140 million years of evolution: the Southeast Asian Draco and Caribbean Anolis. These groups have repeatedly converged in multiple aspects of display along common environmental gradients. Robot playbacks to free-ranging lizards confirmed that the most prominent convergence in display is adaptive, as it improves signal detection. We then provide evidence from a sample of the literature to further show that convergent adaptation among highly divergent animal groups is almost certainly widespread in nature. Signal evolution is therefore curbed towards the same set of adaptive solutions, especially when animals are challenged with the problem of communicating effectively in noisy environments.


Asunto(s)
Lagartos , Adaptación Fisiológica , Adaptación Psicológica , Comunicación Animal , Animales , Evolución Biológica , Filogenia , Territorialidad
4.
Proc Biol Sci ; 288(1952): 20210706, 2021 06 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34102889

RESUMEN

Social animals are expected to face a trade-off between producing a signal that is detectible by mates and rivals, but not obvious to predators. This trade-off is fundamental for understanding the design of many animal signals, and is often the lens through which the evolution of alternative communication strategies is viewed. We have a reasonable working knowledge of how conspecifics detect signals under different conditions, but how predators exploit conspicuous communication of prey is complex and hard to predict. We quantified predation on 1566 robotic lizard prey that performed a conspicuous visual display, possessed a conspicuous ornament or remained cryptic. Attacks by free-ranging predators were consistent across two contrasting ecosystems and showed robotic prey that performed a conspicuous display were equally likely to be attacked as those that remained cryptic. Furthermore, predators avoided attacking robotic prey with a fixed, highly visible ornament that was novel at both locations. These data show that it is prey familiarity-not conspicuousness-that determine predation risk. These findings replicated across different predator-prey communities not only reveal how conspicuous signals might evolve in high predation environments, but could help resolve the paradox of aposematism and why some exotic species avoid predation when invading new areas.


Asunto(s)
Lagartos , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Robotizados , Animales , Ecosistema , Conducta Predatoria
5.
Oecologia ; 197(3): 615-631, 2021 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34716493

RESUMEN

The evolution of territoriality reflects the balance between the benefit and cost of monopolising a resource. While the benefit of territoriality is generally intuitive (improved access to resources), our understanding of its cost is less clear. This paper combines: 1. a review of hypotheses and meta-analytic benchmarking of costs across diverse taxa; and 2. a new empirical test of hypotheses using a longitudinal study of free-living male territorial lizards. The cost of territoriality was best described as a culmination of multiple factors, but especially costs resulting from the time required to maintain a territory (identified by the meta-analysis) or those exacerbated by a territory that is large in size (identified by the empirical test). The meta-analysis showed that physiological costs such as energetic expenditure or stress were largely negligible in impact on territory holders. Species that used territories to monopolise access to mates appeared to incur the greatest costs, whereas those defending food resources experienced the least. The single largest gap in our current understanding revealed by the literature review is the potential cost associated with increased predation. There is also a clear need for multiple costs to be evaluated concurrently in a single species. The empirical component of this study showcases a powerful analytical framework for evaluating a range of hypotheses using correlational data obtained in the field. More broadly, this paper highlights key factors that should be considered in any investigation that attempts to account for the evolutionary origin or ecological variation in territorial behaviour within and between species.


Asunto(s)
Lagartos , Territorialidad , Animales , Estudios Longitudinales , Masculino
6.
Am Nat ; 195(2): E51-E66, 2020 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32017622

RESUMEN

Evolutionary innovations and ecological competition are factors often cited as drivers of adaptive diversification. Yet many innovations result in stabilizing rather than diversifying selection on morphology, and morphological disparity among coexisting species can reflect competitive exclusion (species sorting) rather than sympatric adaptive divergence (character displacement). We studied the innovation of gliding in dragons (Agamidae) and squirrels (Sciuridae) and its effect on subsequent body size diversification. We found that gliding either had no impact (squirrels) or resulted in strong stabilizing selection on body size (dragons). Despite this constraining effect in dragons, sympatric gliders exhibit greater size disparity compared with allopatric gliders, a pattern consistent with, although not exclusively explained by, ecological competition changing the adaptive landscape of body size evolution to induce character displacement. These results show that innovations do not necessarily instigate further differentiation among species, as is so often assumed, and suggest that competition can be a powerful force generating morphological divergence among coexisting species, even in the face of strong stabilizing selection.


Asunto(s)
Vuelo Animal , Lagartos/anatomía & histología , Sciuridae/anatomía & histología , Animales , Evolución Biológica , Tamaño Corporal , Conducta Competitiva , Ecosistema , Lagartos/clasificación , Filogenia , Sciuridae/clasificación
7.
Ecol Lett ; 21(5): 638-645, 2018 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29527800

RESUMEN

Limited dispersal is commonly used to explain differences in diversification rates. An obvious but unexplored factor affecting dispersal is the mode of locomotion used by animals. Whether individuals walk, swim or fly can dictate the type and severity of geographical barriers to dispersal, and determine the general range over which genetic differentiation might occur. We collated information on locomotion mode and genetic differentiation (FST ) among vertebrate populations from over 400 published articles. Our results showed that vertebrate species that walk tend to have higher genetic differentiation among populations than species that swim or fly. Within species that swim, vertebrates in freshwater systems have higher genetic differentiation than those in marine systems, which is consistent with the higher number of species in freshwater environments. These results show that locomotion mode can impact gene flow among populations, supporting at a broad-scale what has previously been proposed at smaller taxonomical scales.


Asunto(s)
Flujo Genético , Filogenia , Vertebrados , Animales , Flujo Génico , Variación Genética , Natación , Vertebrados/genética
8.
Am Nat ; 189(5): 570-579, 2017 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28410030

RESUMEN

An ecological release from competition or predation is a frequent adaptive explanation for the colonization of novel environments, but empirical data are limited. On the island of Rarotonga, several blenny fish species appear to be in the process of colonizing land. Anecdotal observations have implied that aquatic predation is an important factor in prompting such amphibious fish behavior. We provide evidence supporting this hypothesis by demonstrating that amphibious blennies shift their abundance up and down the shoreline to remain above predatory fishes that periodically move into intertidal areas during high tide. A predation experiment using blenny mimics confirmed a high risk of aquatic predation for blennies, significantly higher than predation experienced on land. These data suggest that predation has played an active role in promoting terrestrial activity in amphibious blennies and provide a rare example of how ecological release from predation could drive the colonization of a novel environment.


Asunto(s)
Distribución Animal , Cadena Alimentaria , Perciformes/fisiología , Animales , Ecosistema , Polinesia , Conducta Predatoria
9.
Biol Lett ; 13(2)2017 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28179410

RESUMEN

Effective communication requires animal signals to be readily detected by receivers in the environments in which they are typically given. Certain light conditions enhance the visibility of colour signals and these conditions can vary depending on the orientation of the sun and the position of the signaller. We tested whether Draco sumatranus gliding lizards modified their position relative to the sun to enhance the conspicuousness of their throat-fan (dewlap) during social display to conspecifics. The dewlap was translucent, and we found that lizards were significantly more likely to orient themselves perpendicular to the sun when displaying. This increases the dewlap's radiance, and likely, its conspicuousness, by increasing the amount of light transmitted through the ornament. This is a rare example of a behavioural adaptation for enhancing the visibility of an ornament to distant receivers.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Animal , Lagartos/fisiología , Luz Solar , Comunicación Animal , Animales , Femenino , Malasia , Masculino , Territorialidad
10.
Am Nat ; 188(3): 306-18, 2016 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27501088

RESUMEN

Understanding the interacting outcomes of selection and historical contingency in shaping adaptive evolution remains a challenge in evolutionary biology. While selection can produce convergent outcomes when species occupy similar environments, the unique history of each species can also influence evolutionary trajectories and result in different phenotypic end points. The question is to what extent historical contingency places species on different adaptive pathways and, in turn, the extent to which we can predict evolutionary outcomes. Among lizards there are several distantly related genera that have independently evolved an elaborate extendible dewlap for territorial communication. We conducted a detailed morphological study and employed new phylogenetic comparative methods to investigate the evolution of the underlying hyoid that powers the extension of the dewlap. This analysis showed that there appear to have been multiple phenotypic pathways for evolving a functionally convergent dewlap. The biomechanical complexity that underlies this morphological structure implies that adaptation should have been constrained to a narrow phenotypic pathway. However, multiple adaptive solutions have been possible in apparent response to a common selection pressure. Thus, the phenotypic outcome that subsequently evolved in different genera seems to have been contingent on the history of the group in question. This blurs the distinction between convergent and historically contingent adaptation and suggests that adaptive phenotypic diversity can evolve without the need for divergent natural selection.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Hueso Hioides/anatomía & histología , Lagartos/anatomía & histología , Lagartos/genética , Comunicación Animal , Animales , Masculino , Filogenia , Caracteres Sexuales
11.
Oecologia ; 181(3): 769-81, 2016 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26932469

RESUMEN

The colonisation of new environments is a central evolutionary process, yet why species make such transitions often remains unknown because of the difficulty in empirically investigating potential mechanisms. The most likely explanation for transitions to new environments is that doing so conveys survival benefits, either in the form of an ecological release or new ecological opportunity. Life history theory makes explicit predictions about how traits linked to survival and reproduction should change with shifts in age-specific mortality. We used these predictions to examine whether a current colonisation of land by fishes might convey survival benefits. We found that blenny species with more terrestrial lifestyles exhibited faster reproductive development and slower growth rates than species with more marine lifestyles; a life history trade off that is consistent with the hypothesis that mortality has become reduced in younger life stages on land. A plausible explanation for such a shift is that an ecological release or opportunity on land has conveyed survival benefits relative to the ancestral marine environment. More generally, our study illustrates how life history theory can be leveraged in novel ways to formulate testable predictions on why organisms might make transitions into novel environments.


Asunto(s)
Peces , Estadios del Ciclo de Vida , Animales , Evolución Biológica , Ambiente , Reproducción
12.
BMC Evol Biol ; 15: 137, 2015 Jul 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26156849

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Whether natural selection can erase the imprint of past evolutionary history from phenotypes has been a topic of much debate. A key source of evidence that present-day selection can override historically contingent effects comes from the repeated evolution of similar adaptations in different taxa. Yet classic examples of repeated evolution are often among closely related taxa, suggesting the likelihood that similar adaptations evolve is contingent on the length of time separating taxa. To resolve this, we performed a meta-analysis of published reports of repeated evolution. RESULTS: Overall, repeated evolution was far more likely to be documented among closely related than distantly related taxa. However, not all forms of adaptation seemed to exhibit the same pattern. The evolution of similar behavior and physiology seemed frequent in distantly related and closely related taxa, while the repeated evolution of morphology was heavily skewed towards closely related taxa. Functionally redundant characteristics-alternative phenotypes that achieve the same functional outcome-also appeared less contingent. CONCLUSIONS: If the literature provides a reasonable reflection of the incidence of repeated evolution in nature, our findings suggest that natural selection can overcome contingent effects to an extent, but it depends heavily on the aspect of the phenotype targeted by selection.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Selección Genética , Aclimatación , Adaptación Fisiológica , Animales , Filogenia
13.
BMC Evol Biol ; 14: 97, 2014 May 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24884492

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Divergence between populations in reproductively important features is often vital for speciation. Many studies attempt to identify the cause of population differentiation in phenotype through the study of a specific selection pressure. Holistic studies that consider the interaction of several contrasting forms of selection are more rare. Most studies also fail to consider the history of connectivity among populations and the potential for genetic drift or gene flow to facilitate or limit phenotypic divergence. We examined the interacting effects of natural selection, sexual selection and the history of connectivity on phenotypic differentiation among five populations of the Pacific leaping blenny (Alticus arnoldorum), a land fish endemic to the island of Guam. RESULTS: We found key differences among populations in two male ornaments--the size of a prominent head crest and conspicuousness of a coloured dorsal fin--that reflected a trade-off between the intensity of sexual selection (male biased sex ratios) and natural selection (exposure to predators). This differentiation in ornamentation has occurred despite evidence suggesting extensive gene flow among populations, which implies that the change in ornament expression has been recent (and potentially plastic). CONCLUSIONS: Our study provides an early snapshot of divergence in reproductively important features that, regardless of whether it reflects genetic or plastic changes in phenotype, could ultimately form a reproductive barrier among populations.


Asunto(s)
Peces/clasificación , Peces/genética , Flujo Génico , Especiación Genética , Animales , Tamaño Corporal , Femenino , Peces/fisiología , Masculino , Reproducción , Selección Genética , Caracteres Sexuales
14.
Oecologia ; 175(2): 651-66, 2014 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24658764

RESUMEN

Sympatric species that initially overlap in resource use are expected to partition the environment in ways that will minimize interspecific competition. This shift in resource use can in turn prompt evolutionary changes in morphology. A classic example of habitat partitioning and morphological differentiation are the Caribbean Anolis lizards. Less well studied, but nevertheless striking analogues to the Anolis are the Southeast Asian Draco lizards. Draco and Anolis have evolved independently of each other for at least 80 million years. Their comparison subsequently offers a special opportunity to examine mechanisms of phenotypic differentiation between two ecologically diverse, but phylogenetically distinct groups. We tested whether Draco shared ecological axes of differentiation with Anolis (e.g., habitat use), whether this differentiation reflected interspecific competition, and to what extent adaptive change in morphology has occurred along these ecological axes. Using existing data on Anolis, we compared the habitat use and morphology of Draco in a field study of allopatric and sympatric species on the Malay Peninsula, Borneo and in the Philippines. Sympatric Draco lizards partitioned the environment along common resource axes to the Anolis lizards, especially in perch use. Furthermore, the morphology of Draco was correlated with perch use in the same way as it was in Anolis: species that used wider perches exhibited longer limb lengths. These results provide an important illustration of how interspecific competition can occur along common ecological axes in different animal groups, and how natural selection along these axes can generate the same type of adaptive change in morphology.


Asunto(s)
Lagartos/anatomía & histología , Selección Genética , Animales , Evolución Biológica , Borneo , Región del Caribe , Ecosistema , Malasia , Filogenia
15.
Evolution ; 77(3): 660-669, 2023 03 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36626820

RESUMEN

We identified hypotheses for the cause and consequences of the loss of complexity in animal signals and tested these using a genus of visually communicating lizards, the Southeast Asian Draco lizards. Males of some species have lost the headbob component from their display, which is otherwise central to the communication of this genus. These males instead display a large, colorful dewlap to defend territories and attract mates. This dewlap initially evolved to augment the headbob component of the display, but has become the exclusive system of communication. We tested whether the loss of headbobs was caused by relaxed selection, habitat-dependent constraints, or size-specific energetic constraints on display movement. We then examined whether the consequences of this loss have been mitigated by increased signaling effort or complexity in the color of the dewlap. It appears the increased cost of display movement resulting from the evolution of large body size might have contributed to the loss of headbobs and has been somewhat compensated for by the evolution of greater complexity in dewlap color. However, this evolutionary shift is unlikely to have maintained the complexity previously present in the communication system, resulting in an apparent detrimental loss of information potential.


Asunto(s)
Ecosistema , Lagartos , Animales , Masculino , Comunicación Animal
16.
Am Nat ; 177(1): 54-64, 2011 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21117941

RESUMEN

Animals communicating socially are expected to produce signals that are conspicuous within the habitats in which they live. The particular way in which a species adapts to its environment will depend on its ancestral condition and evolutionary history. At this point, it is unclear how properties of the environment and historical factors interact to shape communication. Tropical Anolis lizards advertise territorial ownership using visual displays in habitats where visual motion or "noise" from windblown vegetation poses an acute problem for the detection of display movements. We studied eight Anolis species that live in similar noise environments but belong to separate island radiations with divergent evolutionary histories. We found that species on Puerto Rico displayed at times when their signals were more likely to be detected by neighboring males and females (during periods of low noise). In contrast, species on Jamaica displayed irrespective of the level of environmental motion, apparently because these species have a display that is effective in a range of viewing conditions. Our findings appear to reflect a case of species originating from different evolutionary starting points evolving different signal strategies for effective communication in noisy environments.


Asunto(s)
Comunicación Animal , Lagartos/fisiología , Adaptación Fisiológica , Animales , Ecosistema , Femenino , Jamaica , Masculino , Filogenia , Puerto Rico , Detección de Señal Psicológica , Especificidad de la Especie , Territorialidad , Percepción Visual
17.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 105(48): 18830-5, 2008 Dec 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19033197

RESUMEN

Environmental noise that reduces the probability that animals will detect communicative signals poses a special challenge for long-range communication. The application of signal-detection theory to animal communication lead to the prediction that signals directed at distant receivers in noisy environments will begin with conspicuous "alerting" components to attract the attention of receivers, before delivery of the information-rich portion of the signal. Whether animals actually adopt this strategy is not clear, despite suggestions that alerts might exist in a variety of taxa. By using a combination of behavioral observations and experimental manipulations with robotic lizard "playbacks," we show that free-living territorial Anolis lizards add an "alert" to visual displays when communicating to distant receivers in situations of poor visibility, and that these introductory alerts in turn enhance signal detection in adverse signaling conditions. Our results show that Anolis lizards are able to evaluate environmental conditions that affect the degradation of long-distance signals and adjust their behavior accordingly. This study demonstrates that free-living animals enhance the efficiency of long-range communication through the modulation of signal design and the facultative addition of an alert. Our findings confirm that alert signals are an important strategy for communicating in "noisy" conditions and suggest a reexamination of the existence of alerts in other animals relying on long-range communication.


Asunto(s)
Ambiente , Lagartos , Ruido , Detección de Señal Psicológica , Vocalización Animal/fisiología , Animales , Masculino , Análisis de Regresión , Robótica , Territorialidad
18.
Am Nat ; 174(4): 585-93, 2009 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19691435

RESUMEN

Researchers have suggested that animals should respond more strongly to conspecific than to heterospecific communication signals used in territorial or courtship contexts. We tested this prediction by reviewing studies that appeared in six prominent journals over the past 10 years. A meta-analysis based on these empirical studies revealed that overall support for this hypothesis was weaker than anticipated. To help clarify the extent to which experimental design might contribute to equivocal findings, we performed playback experiments in the field, using robotic lizards. We examined whether male tropical lizards, Anolis gundlachi, responded more strongly to robots producing conspecific territorial advertisement displays than to robots producing equivalent displays of a novel heterospecific. Although this experiment was conducted under natural conditions in the field, at signaler-receiver distances typical for animals at this locality, and with high statistical power, we found that lizards responded just as aggressively to a simulated rival performing a display they had never seen before as to the same rival performing a conspecific display. Our findings suggest that predicting how animals will respond to conspecific versus heterospecific signals is more complicated than has generally been anticipated.


Asunto(s)
Comunicación Animal , Lagartos , Animales , Señales (Psicología) , Masculino , Proyectos de Investigación , Robótica , Especificidad de la Especie
19.
Am Nat ; 172(4): 585-92, 2008 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18729743

RESUMEN

A key hypothesis explaining the existence of dawn and dusk choruses in acoustically communicating animals centers on the need to advertise continued territorial occupancy after and before a period of nocturnal inactivity. If this hypothesis is correct, it follows that similar dawn and dusk choruses should occur in territorial animals exploiting other signal modalities. Adult male Anolis lizards defend territories by using elaborate head-bobbing displays and extensions of a throat fan or dewlap. Males are inactive at night and return to their territories at dawn, remaining there until dusk. I quantified the production of visual displays as a function of time of day for four species on the island of Jamaica: Anolis lineatopus, Anolis sagrei, Anolis grahami, and Anolis opalinus. All exhibited dawn and/or dusk peaks in display behavior. These patterns have remarkable parallels with the dawn and dusk choruses reported for many acoustically communicating animals.


Asunto(s)
Lagartos/fisiología , Territorialidad , Animales , Jamaica , Masculino , Tiempo
20.
Proc Biol Sci ; 274(1613): 1057-62, 2007 Apr 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17264059

RESUMEN

Extensive research over the last few decades has revealed that many acoustically communicating animals compensate for the masking effect of background noise by changing the structure of their signals. Familiar examples include birds using acoustic properties that enhance the transmission of vocalizations in noisy habitats. Here, we show that the effects of background noise on communication signals are not limited to the acoustic modality, and that visual noise from windblown vegetation has an equally important influence on the production of dynamic visual displays. We found that two species of Puerto Rican lizard, Anolis cristatellus and A. gundlachi, increase the speed of body movements used in territorial signalling to apparently improve communication in visually 'noisy' environments of rapidly moving vegetation. This is the first evidence that animals change how they produce dynamic visual signals when communicating in noisy motion habitats. Taken together with previous work on acoustic communication, our results show that animals with very different sensory ecologies can face similar environmental constraints and adopt remarkably similar strategies to overcome these constraints.


Asunto(s)
Comunicación Animal , Lagartos/fisiología , Movimiento (Física) , Movimiento , Animales , Ambiente , Territorialidad
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