Abstract

The interplay between ecological conditions and life histories has been widely acknowledged in vertebrates, particularly in lizards. Environmental conditions may exert different selective pressures and produce divergent phenotypes even in geographically and genetically close populations. The Iberian wall lizard constitutes a perfect model organism as it is considered a species complex with a complicated evolutionary history. Here, we focus on two proximate populations in which we examined adult morphology and reproductive investment of wild-caught lizards along a 500-m altitudinal gradient with contrasting environmental conditions, where adults show marked morphological differences in spite of being closely related. Also, we performed a common garden experiment to examine embryonic and hatchling growth. We focused on reproductive investment per clutch, incubation time, egg size, morphology and growth rate of hatchlings. Results showed clutch size differences between populations that were independent of the larger body size of highland females. However, there were no egg morphological differences between populations, except for egg width, and this difference disappeared after controlling for female body size. Hatchling lizards from both populations did not differ in morphology. Moreover, we did not observe differences between populations or sexes in hatchling growth. Overall, we provide evidence that the differences in adult body size and clutch size are not driven by size at hatching which is not contributed to by egg size, nor are intrinsic hatchling growth rates associated with the environmental conditions experienced in our common garden experiment, suggesting that adult phenotypes are not the result of intrinsic differences between populations.

Highlights

  • A central tenet of evolutionary biology is that natural selection acting on heritable phenotypic variation will result in adaptation and differentiation among local populations inhabiting environments with different selective regimes (Edwards & Kot, 1995; Endler, 1997; Herrel et al, 2006; Linhart & Grant, 1996)

  • Our study provides clear evidence that altitudinal divergent adult body size in two proximate populations of Iberian wall lizards is not caused by contrasting reproductive investment per egg nor different pre- and post-hatching growth rates

  • Different trends can be found within a genus (Ashton, 2003; Sears, 2005) or even within the same species (e.g. Sceloporus undulatus; Ferguson & Talent, 1993; Niewiarowski & Roosenburg, 1993)

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Summary

Introduction

A central tenet of evolutionary biology is that natural selection acting on heritable phenotypic variation will result in adaptation and differentiation among local populations inhabiting environments with different selective regimes (Edwards & Kot, 1995; Endler, 1997; Herrel et al, 2006; Linhart & Grant, 1996). Life histories show variation at three levels: within populations, among populations of the same species or between species (Bauwens, 1999). This variation in life history phenotypes can be originated by different sources. Adaptive changes may be environmentally induced by extrinsic factors (phenotypic plasticity) (Losos et al, 2000; Via & Lande, 1985), in others they are mediated by intrinsic differences linked to geographically variable conditions (local adaptation) (Travis, 1994); or a combination of both (Sears & Angilletta, 2003). Life histories vary widely between species and populations (Roff, 1992; Stearns, 1992; Du et al, 2005)

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