Abstract

Animals frequently show complex colour patterns involved in social communication, which attracts great interest in evolutionary and behavioural ecology. Most researchers interpret that each colour in animals with multiple patches may either signal a different bearer’s trait or redundantly convey the same information. Colour signals, moreover, may vary geographically and according to bearer qualities. In this study, we analyse different sources of colour variation in the eastern clade of the lizard Psammodromus algirus. Sexual dichromatism markedly differs between clades; both possess lateral blue eyespots, but whereas males in the western populations display strikingly colourful orange-red throats during the breeding season, eastern lizards only show some commissure pigmentation and light yellow throats. We analyse how different colour traits (commissure and throat colouration, and the number of blue eyespots) vary according to body size, head size (an indicator of fighting ability), and sex along an elevational gradient. Our findings show that blue eyespots function independently from colour patches in the commissure and throat, which were interrelated. Males had more eyespots and orange commissures (which were yellow or colourless in females). Throat colour saturation and the presence of coloured commissures increased in older lizards. The number of eyespots, presence of a coloured commissure, and throat colour saturation positively related to head size. However, while the number of eyespots was maximal at lowlands, throat colour saturation increased with altitude. Overall, our results suggest that this lizard harbours several colour signals, which altitudinally differ in their importance, but generally provide redundant information. The relevance of each signal may depend on the context. For example, all signals indicate head size, but commissure colouration may work well at a short distance and when the lizard opens the mouth, while both throat and eyespots might work better at long distance. Meanwhile, throat colouration and eyespots probably work better in different light conditions, which might explain the altitudinal variation in the relative importance of each colour component.

Highlights

  • IntroductionColour ornaments are frequent in the animal kingdom, typically involved in social communication [1]

  • Multiple ornamental colour patches within individuals may be the result of different selective pressures on each patch [5,6], and so each component of colouration may be related to different individual traits

  • The number of blue eyespots was unrelated to the other colouration variables, but lizards with orange commissures had significantly more eyespots (F2, 271 = 31.54, p < 0.001; Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Colour ornaments are frequent in the animal kingdom, typically involved in social communication [1]. Understanding the evolution of colour patterns in animals is challenging because it often arises from the interaction of concomitant selective pressures. Animals frequently show complex and contrasting colour patterns consisting of multiple colour patches [4]. Multiple ornamental colour patches within individuals may be the result of different selective pressures on each patch [5,6], and so each component of colouration may be related to different individual traits (multiple message hypothesis; e.g., [7,8,9]). Different colour patches may act as redundant signals providing similar information, in this way increasing the reliability of the signal (backup hypothesis, [10,11])

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