Abstract

Sexual size dimorphism (SSD) is often assumed to reflect the phenotypic consequences of differential selection operating on each sex. Species that exhibit SSD may also show intersexual differences in other traits, including field-active body temperatures, preferred temperatures, and locomotor performance. For these traits, differences may be correlated with differences in body size or reflect sex-specific trait optima. Male and female Yarrow's spiny lizards, Sceloporus jarrovii, in a population in southeastern Arizona exhibit a difference in body temperature that is unrelated to variation in body size. The observed sexual variation in body temperature may reflect divergence in thermal physiology between the sexes. To test this hypothesis, we measured the preferred body temperatures of male and female lizards when recently fed and fasted. We also estimated the thermal sensitivity of stamina at seven body temperatures. Variation in these traits provided an opportunity to determine whether body size or sex-specific variation unrelated to size shaped their thermal physiology. Female lizards, but not males, preferred a lower body temperature when fasted, and this pattern was unrelated to body size. Larger individuals exhibited greater stamina, but we detected no significant effect of sex on the shape or height of the thermal performance curves. The thermal preference of males and females in a thermal gradient exceeded the optimal temperature for performance in both sexes. Our findings suggest that differences in thermal physiology are both sex- and size-based and that peak performance at low body temperatures may be adaptive given the reproductive cycles of this viviparous species. We consider the implications of our findings for the persistence of S. jarrovii and other montane ectotherms in the face of climate warming.

Highlights

  • Sexual size dimorphism (SSD) likely reflects adaptive effects of differing selective agents acting on each sex (Selander 1966; Zamudio 1998; Blanckenhorn 2005)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • Our study suggests that for S. jarrovii, males and females differ in aspects of their thermal physiology, including the degree to which those traits correlate with their differences in body size

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Summary

Introduction

Sexual size dimorphism (SSD) likely reflects adaptive effects of differing selective agents acting on each sex (Selander 1966; Zamudio 1998; Blanckenhorn 2005). Elucidating the physiological and ecological consequences of SSD provides insight into the proximate and ultimate mechanisms underlying the evolution and maintenance of phenotypic variation (Badyaev 2002; Cox and John-Alder 2007). Males and females of species that exhibit SSD are often dimorphic in other phenotypic traits, including behavior, energetics, physiological performance, and ecology (Cullum 1998; Irschick and Garland 2001). Lailvaux et al (2003) demonstrated that male and female flat lizards (Platysaurus intermedius wilhelmi) differ in sprint capacity, a trait used as a proxy for fitness. In giant petrels (Macronectes spp.), females exhibit longer search distances (a measure of foraging effort) and a 2014 The Authors.

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