4.2 Article

Ontogeny, phylogeny and mechanisms of adaptive changes in evaporative water loss in geckos

期刊

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
卷 34, 期 8, 页码 1290-1301

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.13891

关键词

adaptation; aridity; evaporation; lizards; metabolic rate; scaling

资金

  1. Charles University Grant Agency [1258217]
  2. Charles University [SVV260571/2021]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Research on eyelid geckos showed that body size influences metabolic rate, body surface, and scale morphology, complicating the analysis of adaptive changes in total evaporative water loss (TEWL). Evolutionary shifts in TEWL were strongly correlated with habitat aridity, suggesting a crucial role of skin permeability in adaptation. Comparing intra- and interspecific scaling can help detect body size-dependent mechanisms of adaptive changes in ecophysiological traits.
Body size dependence of metabolic rate, body surface and scale morphology complicate disentangling the contribution of these characteristics to adaptive changes in total evaporative water loss (TEWL) of reptiles. To separate adaptive changes from size-related dependence, we compared intra- and interspecific scaling of several candidate traits in eyelid geckos (Eublepharidae), a group exhibiting large variation in body size and TEWL. The intraspecific allometry of TEWL of a eublepharid species fits the geometric surface-mass relationship. However, evolutionary shifts to both higher and lower evaporation were strongly correlated with habitat aridity and cannot be explained by shifts in body size alone. The intraspecific allometry of standard metabolic rate is nearly the same as the interspecific allometry. Unlike for mammals and birds, this pattern rules out respiratory water loss as a driver of the adaptive changes in TEWL among eublepharids. Scale morphology was independent of TEWL variation as well, but the correlation between cutaneous water loss and TEWL suggests a crucial role of skin permeability in adaptation to habitat aridity. Our analyses demonstrate how powerful a comparison between intra- and interspecific allometries can be for detecting body size-dependent mechanisms of adaptive changes in ecophysiological traits correlated with body size.

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