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Ontogenetic variation in antipredator behavior of Iberian rock lizards (Lacerta monticola):: effects of body-size-dependent thermal-exchange rates and costs of refuge use

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NATL RESEARCH COUNCIL CANADA
DOI: 10.1139/Z03-094

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In lizards, ontogenetic changes in body size affect thermal-exchange rates. This simple physical property may have consequences for thermoregulation, and also for antipredator behavior. We examined how ontogenetic changes in body mass affect rates of heating and cooling of the lizard Lacerta monticola, confirming the general result obtained for other lizards. We further analyzed the differences between juveniles and adults in approach distances to a simulated predator and in time to emerge from refuges. Juvenile lizards have a lower absolute running speed, making them more vulnerable to predation. However, in contrast to results expected from optimal-escape theory, approach distances were shorter for juveniles than for adults. Juveniles may be confident in their small size and only flee when the probability of being detected is high. On the other hand, differences in thermal properties might affect costs of refuge use. Thus, juveniles might delay fleeing because their costs of hiding are higher, as they cool faster than adults. Differences in thermal costs may also explain the juveniles' shorter times of emergence from refuges. Because of the behavioral adjustments involved in antipredator behavior, the physiological costs of reaching a low body temperature in refuges probably do not differ between age classes.

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