Abalos Javier, Bartolomé Alicia, de Lanuza Guillem Pérez I, Aubret Fabien, Font Enrique
Ethology Lab, Instituto Cavanilles de Biodiversidad y Biología Evolutiva, Universitat de València, Valencia, Spain.
Department of Biology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
J Exp Zool A Ecol Integr Physiol. 2026 Jan;345(1):39-57. doi: 10.1002/jez.70035. Epub 2025 Sep 26.
Many animals undergo irreversible ontogenetic color changes (OCCs), yet these changes are often overlooked despite their potential ethological relevance. The problem is compounded when OCCs involve wavelengths invisible to humans. Wall lizards can perceive ultraviolet (UV) light, and their conspicuous ventral and ventrolateral coloration-including UV-reflecting patched-likely serves social communication. Here, we describe OCCs in the ventral (throat and belly) and ventrolateral (outer ventral scales, OVS) coloration of juvenile common wall lizards (Podarcis muralis) as perceived by conspecifics. We measured reflectance in hatchling and yearling lizards raised under semi-natural conditions and used visual modeling to estimate chromatic distances within individuals and across life stages (i.e., hatchlings, yearlings, and adults). Hatchlings typically exhibit UV-enhanced white (UVwhite) on their ventral surfaces (throat, belly, and OVS), a color that is likely discriminable to conspecifics from the most frequent adult colors in the throat (i.e. orange, yellow, and UV-reduced white; UVwhite) and OVS (i.e., UV-blue). The prevalence of UVwhite decreases with age, with the decline being less pronounced in female bellies. OCCs to UV-blue in the OVS are more apparent in males than in females and appear delayed relative to changes in the throat and belly. While throat colors in yearlings are indistinguishable to conspecifics from adult throat colors, yearling UV-blue patches remain chromatically distinct from those of adults. This delay may reflect variations in the mechanisms of color production or distinct selective pressures acting on these patches. Overall, our results show that OCCs in P. muralis fulfill a key requirement for social signals by being perceptible to conspecifics. This supports the hypothesis that OCCs may play a role mediating interactions between juveniles and adults, as well as delaying the onset of colors involved in social communication.
许多动物会经历不可逆的个体发育颜色变化(OCCs),然而,尽管这些变化可能具有潜在的行为学相关性,但它们往往被忽视。当OCCs涉及人类不可见的波长时,问题就更加复杂了。壁蜥能够感知紫外线(UV),它们显著的腹部和腹侧颜色,包括紫外线反射斑块,可能用于社交交流。在这里,我们描述了幼年普通壁蜥(Podarcis muralis)腹侧(喉咙和腹部)和腹侧(腹外侧鳞片,OVS)颜色的OCCs,这些颜色是同种个体所感知到的。我们测量了在半自然条件下饲养的孵化期和一岁期蜥蜴的反射率,并使用视觉建模来估计个体内部和不同生命阶段(即孵化期、一岁期和成年期)之间的色度距离。孵化期蜥蜴的腹侧表面(喉咙、腹部和OVS)通常呈现紫外线增强的白色(UVwhite),这种颜色对于同种个体来说可能与喉咙(即橙色、黄色和紫外线减少的白色;UVwhite)和OVS(即紫外线蓝色)中最常见的成年颜色不同。UVwhite的流行程度随着年龄的增长而降低,在雌性腹部的下降不太明显。雄性OVS中向紫外线蓝色的OCCs比雌性更明显,并且相对于喉咙和腹部的变化似乎有所延迟。虽然一岁期蜥蜴喉咙的颜色对于同种个体来说与成年蜥蜴喉咙的颜色无法区分,但一岁期的紫外线蓝色斑块在色度上仍与成年蜥蜴的斑块不同。这种延迟可能反映了颜色产生机制的差异或作用于这些斑块的不同选择压力。总体而言,我们的结果表明,普通壁蜥的OCCs满足了作为社会信号的一个关键要求,即能够被同种个体感知。这支持了这样一种假设,即OCCs可能在介导幼年和成年个体之间的相互作用以及延迟参与社交交流的颜色出现方面发挥作用。