Journal article
Genetics and evolution of colour patterns in reptiles
M Olsson, D Stuart-Fox, C Ballen
Seminars in Cell and Developmental Biology | Published : 2013
Abstract
The study of coloration in the polyphyletic reptilians has flourished in the last two decades, in particular with respect to the underlying genetics of colour traits, the function of colours in social interactions, and ongoing selection on these traits in the wild. The taxonomic bias, however, is profound: at this level of resolution almost all available information is for diurnal lizards. Therefore, we focus on case studies, for which there are as complete causal sequences of colour evolution as possible, from phenotypic expression of variation in colour, to ongoing selection in the wild. For work prior to 1992 and for a broader coverage of reptilian coloration we refer the readers to Coope..
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Funding Acknowledgements
MO and DS-F were supported by the Australian Research Council. We thank Mo Healey for assistance with literature search and Mo Healey, Michi Hofreiter and Rick Shine for valuable comments on an earlier draft of the MS. We also thank John Endler for advice on colour measurement techniques and appropriate terminology and Adnan Moussalli for providing photographs.