Journal article
Local adaptation and divergence in colour signal conspicuousness between monomorphic and polymorphic lineages in a lizard
CA Mclean, A Moussalli, D Stuart-Fox
Journal of Evolutionary Biology | Published : 2014
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.12521
Abstract
Population differences in visual environment can lead to divergence in multiple components of animal coloration including signalling traits and colour patterns important for camouflage. Divergence may reflect selection imposed by different receivers (conspecifics, predators), which depends in turn on the location of the colour patch. We tested for local adaptation of two genetically and phenotypically divergent lineages of a rock-inhabiting lizard, Ctenophorus decresii, by comparing the visual contrast of colour patches to different receivers in native and non-native environments. The lineages differ most notably in male throat coloration, which is polymorphic in the northern lineage and mon..
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Funding Acknowledgements
Funding was provided by the Australian Research Council to DSF and Nature Foundation South Australia and the Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment to CM. We thank Danial Abdul-Rahman, Adam Elliott and Bryant Turffs for assistance in the field and are grateful to Leah and Richard Khoe and Peter Watkins for their hospitality. This work was conducted with ethics approvals and permits from the University of Melbourne Animal Ethics Committee (1011760.1), South Australian Wildlife Ethics Committee (18/2010) and the South Australia Department of Environment, Water and Natural Resources (E25861-1, 15/0231).