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Studi menunjukkan risiko kadal jantan menjadi makan siang burung untuk menarik pasangan
Date:
September 22, 2015
Source:
University of Cambridge
Summary:
Penelitian baru menunjukkan kadal jantan lebih mungkin dibandingkan betina untuk diserang oleh predator karena warna-warna cerah yang mereka butuhkan untuk menarik pasangan juga membuat mereka lebih mencolok untuk burung .
........... Menggunakan model yang direplikasi pewarnaan dari kadal dinding jantan dan betina yang ditemukan di pulau-pulau Yunani Skopelos dan Syros , mereka menemukan bahwa model kadal jantan kurang baik dalam kamuflase terhadap habitat mereka dan lebih mungkin untuk menjadi mangsa serangan burung ............more
Love's labors:
Study shows male lizards risk becoming lunch for a bird to attract a mate
Date:
September 22, 2015
Source:
University of Cambridge
Summary:
New research shows male lizards are more likely than females to be attacked
by predators because the bright colors they need to attract a mate also make
them more conspicuous to birds.
................
In the animal kingdom, the flashiest males often have more luck attracting
a mate. But when your predators hunt by sight, this can pose an interesting problem.
Like many species, lizards use bright colours for sexual signalling to
attract females and intimidate rival males. A new study published in Ecology
and Evolution by Kate Marshall from the University of Cambridge's
Department of Zoology and Martin Stevens from the University of Exeter's Centre
for Ecology and Conservation has provided evidence that this signalling comes
at a cost.
Using models that replicated the colouration of male and female wall
lizards found on the Greek islands of Skopelos and Syros, they found that the
male lizard models were less well camouflaged against their habitat and more
likely to fall prey to bird attacks.
Marshall, lead author of the study, explains: "we wanted to get to the
origins of colour evolution; to find out what is causing colour variation
between these lizards. We wanted to know whether natural selection favours
camouflage, and whether the conflicting need to have bright sexual signals
might impair its effectiveness.
"It has previously been assumed that conspicuous male colours are
costly to survival, but this hasn't been tested before among these specific
lizards living on different islands, and in general rarely in a way that takes
into account the particular sensitivities of avian vision."
Birds see the world differently from you or I: they are able to see
ultraviolet (UV) light whereas we cannot, which means they perceive colour (and
camouflage) in a very different way. To test whether the males really are more
visible to feathered predators, the researchers had to develop clay models that
accurately replicated the lizards' colour to a bird's eye.
Using visual modelling, Marshall and her colleagues painstakingly tested
around 300 colour variations to find ones that matched the male and female
colours in order to make the 600 clay lizards used in the study.
Marshall comments: "it was important to get a clay colour that would
be indistinguishable from a real lizard to a bird's eyes: we even tried using a
paint colour chart, but they all reflected too much UV. To us the models may
not look like very good likenesses, but to a bird the models should have looked
the same colour as the real lizards."
Marshall and her field assistant, Kate Philpot, placed the male and female
lizard models in ten sites on each of the two islands and checked them every 24
hours over five days to see which had been attacked by birds.
"The models that had been attacked showed signs of beak marks,
particularly around the head, and some had been decapitated," explains
Marshall. "We even found a few heads in different fields to the
bodies."
"The fact that the birds focused their attacks on the heads of the
models also shows us that they perceived them as real lizards because that is
how they would attack real prey," she adds.
At the end of the study, the researchers found that the models with male
colouration had been attacked more than the models with female colouration.
Marshall and the team also tested how conspicuous the models were against
their real backgrounds using further visual modelling of avian vision, and
found that the male models were less camouflaged than the females.
"In females, selection seems to have favoured better camouflage to
avoid attack from avian predators. But in males, being bright and conspicuous
also appears to be important even though this heightens the risk of being
spotted by birds," says Marshall.
However, it is not entirely a tale of woe for the male Aegean wall lizard.
Despite being attacked more than the females by predatory birds, 83% of the
male lizard models survived over the course of the five-day experiment.
Marshall explains that this may indicate that males have colour adaptations
that balance the contradictory needs to attract a mate and to avoid becoming
lunch.
"In past work we've found these lizards have evolved bright colours on
their sides, which are more visible to other lizards on the ground than to
birds hunting from above," explains Marshall. "The visual system of
lizards is different again from birds, such as through increased sensitivity to
UV, so the colour on their backs is more obvious to other lizards than to
birds. Such selective "tuning" of colours to the eyes of different
observers might provide at least some camouflage against dangerous predators
that sneakily eavesdrop on the bright signals of their prey."
"With these models we were only able to replicate the overall colour
of the lizards rather than their patterns, so it would be interesting to
investigate further whether these patterns affect the survival rates of lizard
models," she adds. "It would also be great to apply this type of
experiment to other questions, such as how different environments affect the
amount of predation that prey animals experience."
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from materials provided byUniversity
of Cambridge. The original story is licensed under a Creative Commons Licence. Note: Materials may be edited
for content and length.
Journal Reference:
1.
Kate L.A. Marshall, Kate E. Philpot, Martin Stevens.Conspicuous male
coloration impairs survival against avian predators in Aegean wall
lizards,Podarcis erhardii. Ecology and Evolution, 2015; DOI:10.1002/ece3.1650