Journal article

Red carotenoids and associated gene expression explain colour variation in frillneck lizards

CA McLean, A Lutz, KJ Rankin, A Elliott, A Moussalli, D Stuart-Fox

Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences | ROYAL SOC | Published : 2019

Abstract

A long-standing hypothesis in evolutionary ecology is that red-orange ornamental colours reliably signal individual quality owing to limited dietary availability of carotenoids and metabolic costs associated with their production, such as the bioconversion of dietary yellow carotenoids to red ketocarotenoids. However, in ectothermic vertebrates, these colours can also be produced by self-synthesized pteridine pigments. As a consequence, the relative ratio of pigment types and their biochemical and genetic basis have implications for the costs and information content of colour signals; yet they remain poorly known in most taxonomic groups. We tested whether red- and yellow-frilled populations..

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University of Melbourne Researchers