Abstract

AbstractSmall-bodied vertebrates sometimes evolve gigantism on islands, but there is a lack of consistent association with ecological factors or island characteristics. One possible reason is that, even if the ecological conditions are right, body size might fail to diverge on islands that were isolated recently or if there is gene flow between islands and the mainland. We studied body size, ventral colour polymorphism and genetic structure across nine islands and adjacent mainland populations of common wall lizards (Podarcis muralis) off the western coast of France. Population genetic data suggested that island populations might have maintained gene flow after their geographical isolation from the mainland. Island lizards were larger and heavier than mainland lizards on average, but the extent of gigantism varied substantially between islands. Island size and distance from the mainland were poor predictors of body size, but lizards from populations that were highly genetically differentiated from the mainland were larger than lizards from less differentiated populations. Colour morphs that were rare on the mainland tended to be more common on islands. We propose that genetic isolation or bottlenecks promote body size evolution in island lizards, which makes it challenging to identify ecological causes of island gigantism without complementary genetic information.

Highlights

  • Animals that live on islands occasionally diverge from mainland populations in body size, colour or other characters (Grant, 1965; Case, 1978; Lomolino, 1985, 2005)

  • We suggest that this reflects that selection for large body size is more effective in island populations that experience very low levels of gene flow, although there might also be a role for bottlenecks

  • Future studies that attempt to explain why some island populations evolve gigantism should combine studies of ecology with reliable estimates of the timing of divergence and the extent of gene flow between populations

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Summary

Introduction

Animals that live on islands occasionally diverge from mainland populations in body size, colour or other characters (Grant, 1965; Case, 1978; Lomolino, 1985, 2005). Conspicuous instances of body size divergence between island and mainland populations of mammals, birds and reptiles have been explained by a number of ecological factors, including dietary shifts, increased. Studies of island gigantism commonly consider island size and isolation to be proxies of ecological causes of selection (Lomolino, 2005), such features may correlate with genetic differentiation from the mainland. Studies that combine phenotypic and genetic data are an important starting point for identifying the conditions that are conducive for island gigantism

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