4.5 Article

Morphological divergence, tail loss, and predation risk in urban lizards

期刊

URBAN ECOSYSTEMS
卷 24, 期 6, 页码 1391-1398

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11252-021-01122-6

关键词

Tail autotomy; Urban-rural; Morphology; Predation risk; habitat use; Psammophilus dorsalis

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  1. DBT-IISc partnership program

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The study reveals that urbanization impacts the morphological characteristics and tail loss rates of lizards, with more pronounced differences in predation risk between sexes and morphological characteristics between sexes and habitats. The adaptations to urban environments are influenced by multiple selection pressures and associated fitness costs, rather than being solely driven by a single factor such as predation risk.
Urbanisation changes the structure of natural habitats and alters trophic interactions, pressuring urban species to adjust and adapt. Unlike behavioural shifts that tend to be more flexible, morphological characteristics in vertebrates are less plastic and changes may come at a greater cost. We explored the hypothesis that morphological characteristics in a tropical agamid lizard Psammophilus dorsalis are not only selected to suit altered habitat conditions in urbanised areas but reflect predation risk in urban habitats. In addition, we explored differences in tail loss in both sexes from urban and rural habitats. First, we find that predation risk did not differ between urban and rural habitats, but differed between sexes. Conspicuous courtship-coloured male lizards were more likely to be attacked compared to cryptically-coloured female lizards. Next, we find that P. dorsalis differed in key morphological characteristics, with greater urban-rural differences in males than females. Urban lizards had shorter proximal limb elements, longer 4th digits and greater body mass than rural lizards; and among males, urban lizards had significantly larger head sizes and longer distal limb elements than rural lizards. Finally, we find that the rates of tail loss differed between habitats and sexes, with urban male lizards having greater rates of tail loss than rural males and all females. Inter-sexual difference in tail loss was consistent with the difference in predation risk between sexes, but tail loss differences between urban and rural habitats could not be explained by predation risk. In sum, we find that adaptations to novel urban environments are not exclusively driven by a single promoter (e.g. predation risk) but are influenced by multiple selection pressures with associated fitness costs, such as tail loss.

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