4.7 Article

LIFE ON THE ROCKS: HABITAT USE DRIVES MORPHOLOGICAL AND PERFORMANCE EVOLUTION IN LIZARDS

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 89, Issue 12, Pages 3462-3471

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/07-2093.1

Keywords

adaptation; comparative method; ecomorphology; habitat use; lizard; locomotion; performance; physiological ecology; rock use; Scincidae

Categories

Funding

  1. Linnean Society of New South Wales Ethel Mary Read
  2. Royal Zoological Society of NSW
  3. Peter Rankin Trust Fund in Herpetology
  4. JCU supplemental Internal Research

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As a group, lizards occupy a vast array of habitats worldwide, yet there remain relatively few cases where habitat use (ecology), morphology, and thus, performance, are clearly related. The best known examples include: increased limb length in response to increased arboreal perch diameter in anoles and increased limb length in response to increased habitat openness for some skinks. Rocky habitats impose strong natural selection on specific morphological characteristics, which differs from that imposed on terrestrial species, because moving about on inclined substrates of irregular sizes and shapes constrains locomotor performance in predictable ways. We quantified habitat use, morphology, and performance of 19 species of lizards (family Scincidae, subfamily Lygosominae) from 23 populations in tropical Australia. These species use habitats with considerable variation in rock availability. Comparative phylogenetic analyses revealed that occupation of rock-dominated habitats correlated with the evolution of increased limb length, compared to species from forest habitats that predominantly occupied leaf litter. Moreover, increased limb length directly affected performance, with species from rocky habitats having greater sprinting, climbing, and clinging ability than their relatives from less rocky habitats. Thus, we found that the degree of rock use is correlated with both morphological and performance evolution in this group of tropical lizards.

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