Year: 2012 Page 23 of 47

Evolution Meeting 2012: Rapid Character Displacement In Green Anoles

The Evolution meetings are now ended, but the fond memories linger on. Such as Yoel Stuart reporting the results of his study of character displacement in Mosquito Lagoon, Florida. Dredge spoil islands were created about 50 years ago when the area was dredged, producing big piles of sand which were subsequently colonized by plants and, eventually, green anoles. Within the last 10 years, many islands were invaded by brown anoles, but some remained sagrei free. Yoel set out to compare the green anoles on islands with and without brown anoles.

First, though, he demonstrated the islands with and without brown anoles didn’t differ consistently in any environmental parameter. Thus, nature has set up a very good experiment.

Yoel found that green anoles perch higher in the presence of brown anoles, presumably a result of interspecific interactions. Moreover, on brown anole islands, green anoles have better developed toepads. A common garden experiment reveals that these differences are  not the result of plasticity. Hence, morphological differences have evolved in a very short time as a result of a habitat shift caused by the presence of another species–an excellent example or rapid evolutionary change and character displacement in action.

Anole Poetry

While filing old reprints, I came across a paper of unknown provenance by John M. Burns (Emeritus entomologist at the National Museum of Natural History) titled “Poems from the Natural History Seminar” containing poems that Burns composed to introduce speakers in the Wednesday noon seminars at the Museum of Comparative Zoology in the early 1970s.  One of them is relevant to anolologists and was used to introduce Robert Trivers, who presented a seminar on sexual selection in Jamaican Anolis lizards (8 December 1971):

Trivia for Trivers

The male of an anole named garmani / Is subject to sexual selection. / He seeks an existence of harmony / And the chances to make a connection.
To do this he must defend holdings / (Which are plots for becoming attractive) / By resorting to dewlap unfoldings, / Being robust, and generally active.
He must be a competitive wizard, / Yet succeed in enticing a friend / Who will mate him.  But being a lizard, / He does it by halves in the end.

If you enjoy biology-inspired poetry, Burns is also author of the book BioGraffiti (1981, W. W. Norton & Co.).

Evolution Meeting 2012: Liam Revell Wins Young Investigator Award

Liam Revell, Young Investigator Extraordinaire

Anolis natural selection expert and comparative methods guru Liam Revell was today awarded a prestigious Young Investigators Prize from the American Society of Naturalists. The award recognizes Liam’s pathbreaking work advancing the development of statistical methods that incorporate information on phylogenetic relationships into the study of evolutionary diversification, as well as the work he has done studying the role of natural selection in shaping evolutionary direction in anoles.

Liam’s talk first highlighted the important new directions his research is taking in studying adaptation in urban anole populations, as well as in the evolutionary diversity of Caribbean boas, before focusing on the various methodological and analytical advances he has pioneered.

Evolution Meeting 2012: Genetic Differentiation, Dewlap Color, And Reproductive Isolation

Many studies find that two populations are extremely genetically differentiated and assume that they are reproductively isolated. Last night, Anthony Geneva reported results of a study that goes the next step, actually testing for the form of reproductive isolation. His focus was on two parapatric members of the Anolis distichus group in Hispaniola that differ in dewlap color and genetically differentiated (see previous talk in this meeting  by Julienne Ng). By bringing individuals into the laboratory and conducting a massive breeding experiment, he tested whether they would mate and produce offspring and, if so, whether the offspring were viable. This is an enormous undertaking–something like this has never been done on anoles.

After one generation of the two generation experiment, some results are already clear. Members of the  interspecific crosses (based on genetic differentiation, they have been named as different species) will mate–no pre-mating isolation, apparently, despite the different dewlap colors; or at least, not complete isolation. However, the number of inviable eggs is greater in the hybrid crosses. No signs yet of Haldane’s rule of any asymmetric degree of postmating isolation, but more work is yet to come.

Guerrilla Warfare by Female Anoles?

Have any of you witnessed a female anole biting a male anole without provocation and without preceding dewlap displays or bobbing?  In my 20+ years experience with anole husbandry, I have never observed the following behavior by a female Anolis carolinensis.

To make room for a new baby A. carolinensis, this two-year-old gravid female was moved from her solitary home in a 20 gallon aquarium to a 40 gallon aquarium with a roommate.  Her roommate was not new to her as she had previously lived peacefully (and copulated) with this old male A. carolinensis.  Immediately, I noticed bite marks on the female’s head which I assumed were a result of the old male “missing” her neck during breeding attempts (he is pretty old at 7 years of age after all).  What drew my attention; however, were the bite marks on the male’s head, neck, and leg.  Later, I observed this female biting while bobbing and pulling on the neck of the male.  Even after I moved her to another aquarium to live with a different male, I found similar wounds on his neck, leg, and tail.  Now she lives alone again and I thought this would end the attacks but today, while she was out of her aquarium, she ambushed another male, firmly biting his neck, and did not release until I intervened.  I captured a portion of her attack in the video below:

As you can see, she is clearly stressed as evidenced by the black patches behind her eyes and she seems intent on causing as much damage as possible to the male.  I’m interested to know if others have observed this type of “Guerrilla warfare” by female anoles.  Any insight into its etiology or purpose?

Evolution Meeting 2012: Geographic Vs. Ecological Determinants of Genetic Differentiation In Island Lizards

Recent years have seen great enthusiasm for the idea that populations experiencing different selective pressures will diverge genetically, perhaps to the point of speciation. Ian Wang examined 17 species of Anolis lizards to determine the extent to which genetic differences between populations were a function of ecological differences in the environments they occupy versus geographic differences. Across all 17 species, geography explained twice as much of the variation as did ecological differences, although patterns varied from one species to another. These results suggest that although adaptation to different environment plays some role in driving genetic differentiation, other factors are equally or more important in most cases.

Evolution Meeting 2012: Costs Of Reproduction In Brown Anoles

Previous work by Cox and Calsbeek has shown that ovariectomized lizards grow faster and survive longer than lizards with intact ovaries. Ovariectomized lizards also develop larger fat bodies, and a reasonable explanation is that it is the greater fat that these lizard accumulate that allows them to survive better over the winter. To test this hypothesis, the authors experimentally removed fat bodies from some lizards and not others. They found that this treatment had no effect on survival, thus disproving the hypothesis. In other words, removal of the ovaries both increases fat body buildup and survival, but the two phenomena are not related, a nice demonstration of the importance of experimental manipulation to understand disentangle correlation from causation and elucidate physiological mechanisms.

Evolution Meeting 2012: Genetic Differentiation Of South American Rainforest Anoles

Anolis punctatus. Photo from http://www.flickr.com/photos/32688820@N02/3121948727/sizes/m/in/photostream/

Anolis punctatus is one of the coolest looking anoles of South America, which is saying a lot. It is widely distributed throughout South American rainforest habitats, but has been relatively little studied. Last night Ivan Prates exhibited a poster reporting the results of a phylogeographic analysis of the species from Amazonian and Atlantic forests. The study is impressive in its scope and sampling, and finds a high degree of genetic divergence throughout the species’ range, paralleling results for another Amazonian species group, A. chrysolepis and relatives. In addition, the Atlantic forest populations are nested within Amazonian populations, suggesting that dispersal occurred from the Amazon to the Atlantic. Molecular calibration puts the date of the dispersal at ca. 3 million years ago, which would correspond with vegetation reconstructions that suggest the forests were connected at that time.

In addition, the study contained samples of the extremely little known horned anole of the Amazon, A. phyllorhinus, which places this species as the close relative of A. punctatus, and hence distantly related to the Ecuadorian horned anole, A. proboscis.

Evolution Meeting 2012: The Role Of Color In Evolutionary Diversification In Anoles

Anolis marmoratus from Guadeloupe. Photo from http://www.karibische-anolis.de/

It was a colorful morning here in Ottawa. First, Julienne Ng reported on her work on the causes and consequences of dewlap color evolution in Anolis distichus in Hispaniola. This species is renowned for the variety of dewlap colors–primarily whites, yellows, and oranges, but also red–displayed by populations throughout the island, and a phylogeographic analysis indicates that different dewlap colors have evolved multiple times. Julienne demonstrated that a correlation exists between environmental variables (e.g., precipitation) and dewlap color and brightness; these variables explained much more of the variation than did geographic distance separating populations or the degree of genetic differentiation. She then asked whether differences in dewlap color serve to reproductively isolate populations. She tested this hypothesis by sampling four transects across areas whether dewlap color changes over a short distance. She found that in one transect, the two populations differing in dewlap color were highly differentiated genetically; in the other three cases, by contrast, the populations were not at all differentiated.  This finding is potentially important, as dewlap color is often used to describe different species; the results indicate that populations with different dewlap colors may not be strongly isolated genetically.

Later in the morning, Chris Schneider reported on studies of the genetic determinants of color in the wildly variable Guadeloupean species, Anolis marmoratus. This species exhibits so much variation that 12 subspecies have been described from Guadeloupe and nearby islands. By illumina sequencing, Schneider has found 250 fixed differences between populations differing in color–one with red heads, the other with blue. Preliminary analysis suggests that at least 60 protein-coding genes are involved. This work is a promising first step in identifying the genes underlying color differences in anoles.

Evolution Meeting 2012: Genetics Of Postcopulatory Mate Choice

Several years ago, Calsbeek and Bonneaud published a provocative paper in which they showed that females preferentially used sperm from large males to produce male offspring and from small males to produce females. An obvious question is: how do they do this? Anoles are known to have sperm storage and to be able to produce fertile young many months after mating, but how can females “choose” which male’s sperm to use to fertilize offspring? Presumably, in some way the female would have to keep track of which sperm came from which male, and what the phenotypic attributes are of those males.

Dartmouth graduate student Katie Duryea reported ongoing work aimed at addressing these questions. Taking a two-pronged approach, she is looking at the genetic basis underlying reproduction in anoles. First, she is examining gene expression in the reproductive tract of female Anolis carolinensis, comparing recently mated and unmated individuals. Preliminary results revealed more than 5000 genes that appear to be upregulated, based on transcript abundance, in the females. Examination of gene ontologies  reveals interesting patterns of what types of genes are upregulated, with apparent similarities to similar work in Drosophila. Second, taking a candidate gene approach focusing on serine proteinase genes, Duryea is comparing differentiation between A. carolinensis and A. sagrei. Preliminary results for one gene show a relatively large number of synonymous changes, suggestive of the action of natural selection.

Clearly, this work is in its early stages, but results so far are tantalizing and provide another example of how the anole genome will prove useful in addressing outstanding questions in anole evolution and behavioral ecology.

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