4.5 Article

Sex-specific microhabitat use is associated with sex-biased thermal physiology in Anolis lizards

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 224, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.235697

Keywords

Anolis; Climate change; Habitat use; Sexual dimorphism; Thermal tolerance; Thermoregulation

Categories

Funding

  1. Smithsonian Institution Biodiversity Genomics Postdoctoral Fellowship
  2. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Earl S. Tupper Postdoctoral Fellowship
  3. Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Studies Grant
  4. NERC studentship [NE/L002485/1]
  5. American Museum of Natural History Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Grants
  6. Georgia Southern University Graduate Student Development
  7. Smithsonian Short-Term Fellowship
  8. John Templeton Foundation

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Sexual dimorphism can evolve if fitness optima for a given trait differ between males and females in a population. Differences in habitat use and thermal physiology may lead to sexual divergence in species with sexual size dimorphism. However, studies linking these differences to behavior or microhabitat use are rare, and differences in thermal physiology between sexes may arise from phenotypic plasticity or sex-specific selection rather than direct effects of thermal environments.
If fitness optima for a given trait differ between males and females in a population, sexual dimorphism may evolve. Sex-biased trait variation may affect patterns of habitat use, and if the microhabitats used by each sex have dissimilar microclimates, this can drive sex-specific selection on thermal physiology. Nevertheless, tests of differences between the sexes in thermal physiology are uncommon, and studies linking these differences to microhabitat use or behavior are even rarer. We examined microhabitat use and thermal physiology in two ectothermic congeners that are ecologically similar but differ in their degree of sexual size dimorphism. Brown anoles (Anolis sagrei) exhibit male-biased sexual size dimorphism and live in thermally heterogeneous habitats, whereas slender anoles (Anolis apletophallus) are sexually monomorphic in body size and live in thermally homogeneous habitats. We hypothesized that differences in habitat use between the sexes would drive sexual divergence in thermal physiology in brown anoles, but not slender anoles, because male and female brown anoles may be exposed to divergent microclimates. We found that male and female brown anoles, but not slender anoles, used perches with different thermal characteristics and were sexually dimorphic in thermal tolerance traits. However, field-active body temperatures and behavior in a laboratory thermal arena did not differ between females and males in either species. Our results suggest that sexual dimorphism in thermal physiology can arise from phenotypic plasticity or sex-specific selection on traits that are linked to thermal tolerance, rather than from direct effects of thermal environments experienced by males and females.

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