Abstract
Correlations, univariate analyses, multiple group principal component analyses, canonical analyses, contours and transects arc used to describe microgeographic variation in body dimensions and scalation of the scincid lizard Chalcides sexlineatus within the island of Gran Canaria. Patterns of geographic variation in both character systems show similar north-east/south-west clines, scalation variation is also altitude-related. Canonical variate analyses showed that the generalized patterns of geographic variation in scalation and body dimensions were largely unidimensional. Four hypotheses, each one predicting a unidimensional pattern of microgeographic variation, were tested simultaneously against each described pattern using partial correlation. This method did not reject north/south differences in climate and/or vegetation as a cause of the microevolution in body dimensions. Similarly, altitude and north/south differences in climate/vegetation were not rejected for scalation. Partial correlation rejected the hypothesis that there are two species of Chalcides with different ranges within Gran Canaria. Mantel tests rejected the altitude hypothesis alone as a cause of the generalized geographic variation in body dimensions but did not reject any of the proposed hypotheses as being causal for the generalized geographic variation in scalation. A consideration is made of how habitat variation could cause differential selection and comparisons drawn with a parallel pattern of microgeographic variation found in the colour pattern, scalation and size of a lizard on a neighbouring island.
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