Abstract

In a high-altitude population of the Drakensberg crag lizard, Pseudocordylus melanotus, most adult males, unlike adult females, are brightly coloured, and they are larger in body size and have relatively larger heads than females. Three basic colour phases can be distinguished among the brightly coloured adult males. No apparent differences in reproductive activity, number and differentiation state of the generation glands and femoral pores, or scar frequency were noted among the three colour phases. In males the development of bright colours and the differentiation of the epidermal glands coincide with the onset of sexual maturity. Sexual dimorphism in head size of adults is due to a decrease in female head size relative to juvenile head size as well as an increase in relative head size of males. Preliminary data indicate a social structure of territorial polygyny in P. melanotus and suggest that the dimorphism can partly be ascribed to sexual selection. There are also, however, indications of altitudinal variation in the expression of sexual dimorphism, which may be explained in terms of differential energy allocation by females at different altitudes.

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