4.5 Article

Colorful tails fade when lizards adopt less risky behaviors

期刊

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY
卷 64, 期 2, 页码 205-213

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00265-009-0837-z

关键词

Acanthodactylus; Deflective display; Dorsal pigmentation; Movement; Ontogeny; Predation risk; Tail autotomy

资金

  1. Gaylord Donnelley Environmental Fellowship
  2. Yale Institute for Biospheric Studies (YIBS)
  3. Israel Nature and Parks Authority

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Colorful tails that become cryptic during ontogeny are found in diverse taxa. Nevertheless, the evolutionary bases for this change remain debated. Recent work suggests that colorful tails, deflective displays, and striped patterns may represent antipredator mechanisms used by immature lizards to compensate for being more active and hence more vulnerable to predation (increased movement hypothesis, IMH). I challenged the generality of IMH by comparing foraging behavior and frequency of tail displays across five Acanthodactylus lizards that vary in fundamental life history traits, before and after the tail changed color. As these species underwent changes in tail coloration, they congruently adopted less risky behaviors and reduced the frequencies of tail displays. Contrary to expectation, in two species, the hatchling risky behavior resulted not from increased movements but from longer stay in exposed microhabitats. I suggest that colorful tails and deflective tail displays are synergistic antipredator mechanisms neonates use to minimize the fitness consequences of using various risky behaviors rather than increased movement alone.

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