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Badiane, A., & Font, E. (2021). Information content of ultraviolet-reflecting colour patches and visual perception of body coloration in the tyrrhenian wall lizard podarcis tiliguerta. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 75, 
Added by: Sarina (2023-12-09 15:22:40)   
Resource type: Journal Article
DOI: 10.1007/s00265-021-03023-2
BibTeX citation key: Badiane2021
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Categories: Englisch = English
Creators: Badiane, Font
Collection: Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
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Meine Sichtweise (Keine vollständige Zusammenfassung des Artikels! Meine Meinung muss nicht mit der Meinung der Autoren übereinstimmen! Bitte lesen Sie auch die Originalarbeit!)     

50 männliche Tiere der Tyrrhenische Mauereidechse (Podarcis tiliguerta) wurden im Habitat gefangen und untersucht: Mit einem Spektrometer wurde das Reflexionsspektrum (1) am Bauch, (2) am Hals und (3) am zweiten und dritten UV-blauen Punkt an beiden Seiten gemessen. Die Reflexionsspektren sind in Fig2 abgebildet. Am Hals gibt es drei Farbvarianten: weiß, orange und gelb, wobei sich orange und gelb nur in Details > 550 nm Wellenlänge unterscheiden. Die Farborte sind in der Farbpyramide basierend auf den Photorezeptoren von P. muralis eingetragen. Die Intensitäten und Farbtöne der fünf Farben (weiß, orange, gelb, uv-blau und Bauch) sowie der paarweise Farbkontrast basierend auf dem Farbsystem der Eidechsen wurde berechnet.

 
Die UV-blauen Punkte waren im Farbsystem der Eidechsen am auffälligsten. Außerdem gab es Korrelationen mit Körpergröße und anderen Anzeichen für "Kampfstärke", wobei die Tiere den geplanten "Bissstärke-Test" leider verweigert haben. Die Ergebnisse sind von einem sehr starken Literaturteil in Einleitung und Diskussion umrahmt: Die Färbung spielt eine starke Rolle im Wettbewerb der männlichen Tiere untereinander.

Added by: Sarina  Last edited by: Sarina
Abstract
 

Colour signals are ubiquitous in nature but only recently have researchers recognised the potential of ultraviolet (UV)-reflecting colour patches to function as signals of quality. Lacertid lizards often display UV-blue patches on their flanks and black spots over their entire body, both of which are under sexual selection. They also have a cryptic dorsum and some species have a conspicuous, polymorphic ventral coloration. In this study, we use the Tyrrhenian wall lizard Podarcis tiliguerta to investigate the information content of the lateral UV-blue patches and black melanin spots of males by assessing the relationship between colour features and individual quality traits. In addition, we use a visual modelling procedure to examine whether the coloration of the different body parts and different colour morphs can be distinguished by a wall lizard visual system. We found that larger males had more numerous and larger UV-blue patches, with a higher UV chroma, UV-shifted hue, but a lower spectral intensity than smaller males. The extent of black on the throat, dorsum, and flanks also correlated with male body size and size-corrected head length but not with colour features of the UV-blue patches. These results suggest that the UV-blue and melanic colour patches may provide different, non-redundant information about male resource holding potential, and thus act as condition-dependent indicators of male quality. Finally, we found that the different body parts can be chromatically distinguished from each other, and that the UV-blue patches are the most conspicuous while the dorsum is the least conspicuous. Significance statement Many animals use their coloration to convey information about their quality as rivals or mates. Yet, until recently researchers have not recognised the potential of ultraviolet colour patches to function as signals of quality. In this study, we first show that male Tyrrhenian wall lizards display ultraviolet-blue and black colour patches that correlate positively with some aspect of their quality such as body or head size. Furthermore, our visual modelling procedure suggests that these lizards are able to distinguish the colours of their body parts from each other, with dorsal colours being the least conspicuous and ultraviolet-blue coloration being the most conspicuous.


Added by: Sarina  
Quotes
   UV signalling has now been shown to occur in many taxa, including ... lizards (e.g. Whiting et al. 2006), amphibians (e.g. Secondi et al. 2012), ...

While current evidence seems to indicate that, in lacertids, UV signals primarily evolved to resolve male-male conficts and avoid contest escalation (Bajer et al. 2011; Pérez i de Lanuza et al. 2014; Martin et al. 2015a, 2016), UV coloration may also play a role in female mate choice in some species (Bajer et al. 2010; Badiane et al. 2020). Wall lizards from the genus Podarcis comprise 24 species and the males of most of these species have conspicuous colour patches on some of their outer-ventral scales (OVS). These colour patches appear blue to the human eye but are in fact UV-refecting and therefore best described as UV-blue. In the common wall lizard (Podarcis muralis), Pérez i de Lanuza et al. (2014) showed that the hue and UV chroma of the UV-blue patches are related to size-independent bite force (a proxy of male fghting ability in lizards, Huyghe et al. 2009) and body condition, respectively, suggesting condition dependence and a role in male-male interactions and contest behaviour. MacGregor et al. (2017) also found a relationship between the hue and UV chroma of the UV-blue patches and male reproductive success in two P. muralis lineages. Martin et al. (2015a) and Names et al. (2019) found that manipulating the refectance and size of UV-blue patches afected male agonistic interactions. Finally, Abalos et al. (2016) reported that natural variation in the size and refectance of the UV-blue patches does not predict the outcome of laboratory-staged contests between size-matched males, and proposed that the UV-blue patches may be important during the early stages of contests during which rival assessment takes place. Taken together, these results suggest that the UV-blue patches may play a role in male-male signalling, but the evidence for their role as signals of fghting ability remains equivocal.

  Added by: Sarina
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