4.3 Article

Conserved ecophysiology despite disparate microclimatic conditions in a gecko

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jez.2568

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evaporative water loss; Evolution Canyon; gut passage time; metabolic rate; Nahal Oren; temperature preferences

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  1. Clore Foundation

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Despite the contrasting climatic conditions between the opposing slopes of Nahal Oren canyon in Israel, geckos from both sides did not show differences in ecophysiological traits. However, individuals from the north-facing slope were generally more active in earlier hours of the afternoon. This suggests that gene flow or behavioral plasticity may hinder local adaptation, resulting in similar physiological traits among populations.
Microscale differences in the habitats organisms occupy can influence selection regimes and promote intraspecific variation of traits. Temperature-dependent traits can be locally adapted to climatic conditions or be highly conserved and insensitive to directional selection under all but the most extreme regimes, and thus be similar across populations. The opposing slopes of Nahal Oren canyon in the Carmel Mountains, Israel, are strikingly different: the south-facing slope receives intensive solar radiation, is hot and supports mostly annual vegetation, whereas the north-facing slope is similar to 10 degrees C cooler, more humid, and supports Mediterranean woodland. We examined whether these differences manifest in the thermal physiology of a common gecko species Ptyodactylus guttatus in controlled laboratory conditions. We predicted that geckos from the hotter south-facing slope would prefer higher temperatures, have faster gut passage times, lower metabolic and evaporative water loss rates, and start diel activity earlier compared with north-facing slope conspecifics. Contrary to these predictions, there were no differences between any of the ecophysiological traits in geckos from the opposing slopes. Nevertheless, our data showed that individuals from the north-facing slope were generally more active in earlier hours of the afternoon compared with south-facing individuals. We suggest that P. guttatus individuals disperse between the slopes and either gene-flow or behavioral plasticity deter local adaptation, resulting in similar physiological traits. Perhaps a stronger contrast in climatic conditions and a stronger barrier are needed to result in interpopulation divergence in temperature-dependent traits.

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