6533b857fe1ef96bd12b4471

RESEARCH PRODUCT

No evidence for differential sociosexual behavior and space use in the color morphs of the European common wall lizard (Podarcis muralis)

Enrique FontOcéane LiehrmannFabien AubretTobias UllerHanna LaakkonenJavier AbalosPau CarazoAlicia BartoloméGuillem Pérez I De LanuzaGuillem Pérez I De Lanuza

subject

0106 biological sciencesWall lizard[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Populationcolor polymorphism010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencessocial behavior03 medical and health sciencesalternative strategiesBehavioral ecologybiology.animaleducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsQH540-549.5030304 developmental biologyNature and Landscape ConservationOriginal Research0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studybiologyReproductive successEcologyLizardSpace usefree‐ranging populationbiology.organism_classificationmesocosmPodarcis muralisNatural population growthEvolutionary biology[SDE]Environmental SciencesPodarcis muralis

description

Abstract Explaining the evolutionary origin and maintenance of color polymorphisms is a major challenge in evolutionary biology. Such polymorphisms are commonly thought to reflect the existence of alternative behavioral or life‐history strategies under negative frequency‐dependent selection. The European common wall lizard Podarcis muralis exhibits a striking ventral color polymorphism that has been intensely studied and is often assumed to reflect alternative reproductive strategies, similar to the iconic “rock–paper–scissors” system described in the North American lizard Uta stansburiana. However, available studies so far have ignored central aspects in the behavioral ecology of this species that are crucial to assess the existence of alternative reproductive strategies. Here, we try to fill this gap by studying the social behavior, space use, and reproductive performance of lizards showing different color morphs, both in a free‐ranging population from the eastern Pyrenees and in ten experimental mesocosm enclosures. In the natural population, we found no differences between morphs in site fidelity, space use, or male–female spatial overlap. Likewise, color morph was irrelevant to sociosexual behavior, space use, and reproductive success within experimental enclosures. Our results contradict the commonly held hypothesis that P. muralis morphs reflect alternative behavioral strategies, and suggest that we should instead turn our attention to alternative functional explanations.

10.1002/ece3.6659http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC7593164