School of Biodiversity, One Health & Veterinary Medicine, College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, G12 8QQ, UK.
Biotechnical Faculty, Department of Biology, University of Ljubljana, 1000, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
BMC Ecol Evol. 2023 Sep 4;23(1):47. doi: 10.1186/s12862-023-02158-2.
Animals select and interact with their environment in various ways, including to ensure their physiology is at its optimal capacity, access to prey is possible, and predators can be avoided. Often conflicting, the balance of choices made may vary depending on an individual's life-history and condition. The common lizard (Zootoca vivipara) has egg-laying and live-bearing lineages and displays a variety of dorsal patterns and colouration. How colouration and reproductive mode affect habitat selection decisions on the landscape is not known. In this study, we first tested if co-occurring male and female viviparous and oviparous common lizards differ in their microhabitat selection. Second, we tested if the dorsal colouration of an individual lizard matched its basking site choice within the microhabitat where it was encountered, which could be related to camouflage and crypsis.
We found that site use differed from the habitat otherwise available, suggesting lizards actively choose the composition and structure of their microhabitat. Females were found in areas with more wood and less bare ground compared to males; we speculate that this may be for better camouflage and reducing predation risk during pregnancy, when females are less mobile. Microhabitat use also differed by parity mode: viviparous lizards were found in areas with more density of flowering plants, while oviparous lizards were found in areas that were wetter and had more moss. This may relate to differing habitat preferences of viviparous vs. oviparous for clutch lay sites. We found that an individual's dorsal colouration matched that of the substrate of its basking site. This could indicate that individuals may choose their basking site to optimise camouflage within microhabitat. Further, all individuals were found basking in areas close to cover, which we expect could be used to escape predation.
Our study suggests that common lizards may actively choose their microhabitat and basking site, balancing physiological requirements, escape response and camouflage as a tactic for predator avoidance. This varies for parity modes, sexes, and dorsal colourations, suggesting that individual optimisation strategies are influenced by inter-individual variation within populations as well as determined by evolutionary differences associated with life history.
动物以各种方式选择和与环境相互作用,包括确保其生理机能处于最佳状态、能够获得猎物并避免捕食者。这些选择往往相互矛盾,其平衡可能因个体的生活史和状况而异。有产卵和胎生两种繁殖方式的常见蜥蜴(Zootoca vivipara)表现出多种背部图案和颜色。颜色和繁殖方式如何影响蜥蜴在景观中的栖息地选择尚不清楚。在这项研究中,我们首先测试了同时存在的胎生和卵生常见蜥蜴雄性和雌性在微生境选择上是否存在差异。其次,我们测试了个体蜥蜴的背部颜色是否与其在微生境中选择的晒点相匹配,这可能与伪装和保护色有关。
我们发现,蜥蜴的栖息地利用与其他可用的栖息地不同,这表明蜥蜴会主动选择微生境的组成和结构。与雄性蜥蜴相比,雌性蜥蜴出现在有更多树木和更少裸地的区域;我们推测,这可能是为了更好的伪装和减少怀孕期间的捕食风险,因为此时雌性蜥蜴的移动能力较弱。微生境的利用也因繁殖方式的不同而不同:胎生蜥蜴出现在有更多开花植物密度的区域,而卵生蜥蜴出现在更潮湿和有更多苔藓的区域。这可能与胎生和卵生蜥蜴对卵窝地点的不同栖息地偏好有关。我们发现,个体的背部颜色与其晒点的基质相匹配。这可能表明,个体可能会选择晒点以在微生境中优化伪装。此外,所有个体都被发现在靠近遮蔽物的地方晒点,我们预计这可以用来躲避捕食者。
我们的研究表明,常见蜥蜴可能会主动选择微生境和晒点,平衡生理需求、逃避反应和伪装,作为避免捕食者的策略。这因繁殖方式、性别和背部颜色而异,这表明个体优化策略不仅受到种群内个体间变异的影响,还受到与生活史相关的进化差异的影响。