Author: Jonathan Losos Page 53 of 129

Professor of Biology and Director of the Living Earth Collaborative at Washington University in Saint Louis. I've spent my entire professional career studying anoles and have discovered that the more I learn about anoles, the more I realize I don't know.

Baby Horned Anole (Anolis proboscis)

Hatchling pinochio Anole

Baby Anolis proboscis. Photo by Santiago Ron

After prolonged efforts, Ecuadorian anole maestro Fernando Ayala-Varela succeeded in hatching out a baby horned anole. And break out the blue wrapping paper–it’s a boy! And lo and behold, answering a question we all had, the little fellows have little nubbly horns! Well done, Fernando!

Looking for a Great Photo of a Honduran Anole

Anolis allisoni from Roatan, Honduras. Photo by Jonathan Losos.

Anolis allisoni from Roatan, Honduras. Photo by Jonathan Losos.

The Museum of Comparative Zoology will soon publish a major monograph on the anoles of Honduras in the Bulletin of the MCZ and we are looking for a photo of a Honduran anole to put on the cover. We’re looking for an eye-catching shot, suitable for presentation in a vertical format. If you have one that we could use, please let me know.

Another Anole Sticking Its Tongue Out While Displaying

Anolis cupreus. Photo courtesy Mayra Oyervides.

Anolis cupreus. Photo courtesy Mayra Oyervides.

A while back we had a post featuring a photo of Anolis limifrons in full battle mode, tongues sticking out. Check out the comments on that post for discussion of the prevalence of this behavior. One commenter said that he’d seen it in A. cupreus, and now here’s visual proof.

50% Off Ecomorph Wristwatches Today

Crown-giant: A. equestris. Photo by Janson Jones

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

New readers to Anole Annals may be unaware of the AA Ecomorph Line of Wristwear. These snazzy chronometers will be the hit of any party, and would make an excellent gift for the punctuality-impaired. Our initial  release featured four of everyone’s favorite habitat specialists, but grass-bush anoles were subsequently added. Who knows what’s next? Suggestions? These retail at at zazzle.com for the low, low price of $47.95, but if you act quickly, there’s a 50% off sale through midnight tonight–use the code “SUNDAYDEAL47” at checkout. Don’t be the last one on your block to not have a lizard on your watch!

Trunk-Crown: Anolis allisoni

Crown-giant: Anolis equestris

Twig: Anolis occultus

Trunk-ground: Anolis marcanoi

Grass-bush: Anolis pulchellus

 

Great Video of Draco Displaying

Photographer and videographer extraordinaire Rick Stanley, whose work has appeared on AA previously, has just put together a short video of a number of Draco  species signaling and gliding. Some of the shots are extraordinary—it’s particularly cool to see them use their throat lappets and wings for communication. Check it out on Vimeo!

When Do Green Anoles Develop Their Red Dewlap Color?

Not red yet (or maybe not a male)

Adam Freedman is spearheading an effort to identify the genes responsible for anole dewlap color. He’s looking for information on the ontogeny of color in male green anoles, i.e., when the red first appears in a juvenile male. Here’s what he has to say: “In our ongoing work on the genetic basis of dewlap pigmentation, we are looking to investigate changes of gene expression as pigmentation emerges in juvenile male A. carolinensis. However, we do not have any information as to approximately how long after hatching red/pink pigment starts to be visible on the throat, even if perhaps the dewlap has yet to fully form. Does anyone have any information from following hatchlings that could inform our efforts?”

Can anyone help?

Evolution 2014: Hot Lizards in the City, and How They Adapt to Urban Settings

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AA‘s man in Wisconsin, Greg Mayer, filed this report:

In Ernest E. Williams’ 1969 classic on the ecology of colonization, he identified Anolis cristatellus as one of the ‘minor colonizers’– not as widespread as carolinensis and sagrei, but having close relatives on Mona, Desecheo, and the Turks and Caicos. This natural colonization has now been augmented by human introductions– including Florida, Costa Rica, and the Dominican Republic, so that it is moving up on the colonization hit parade. In many of these places (e.g. Miami, Limon, Costa Rica), they have become established in highly human modified habitats.

Another sort of invasion has been taking place within Puerto Rico, as Kristin Winchell of U. Mass., Boston, has reminded us– cristatellus is also occupying (and thriving in) urban habitats in the densely populated parts of Puerto Rico. In her talk, coauthored by Graham Reynolds, Sofia Prado-Irwin, Alberto Puente-Rolon and Liam Revell, she shows that urban habitats present many challenges to anoles. The typical urban habitat is full of man-made surfaces (wood, masonry, glass, metal, oftrn painted), there is little or no canopy, the ground is made up largely of impermeable surfaces (so water runs of quickly), all of which lead to urban habitats being hotter, drier, and quite distinctive compared to the natural forest and woodland habitats. And let’s not forget the cats–all those awful, lizard-eating cats! (Apologies to Jerry Coyne!)

Kristin and company supposed, naturally, that all these environmental differences could lead to fairly intense selection for local adaptation. In particular, they supposed that city lizards should have longer legs (because running on larger, flatter surfaces is done better with longer legs), and that they would have more toe lamellae (to deal with the slippery, texture-less artificial surfaces, where claws are less effective for grip).

They tested these predictions at 3 paired sites near San Juan, Ponce, and Mayaguez (the natural site in San Juan was labeled by a sign at the site as “Una esmeralda verde en un mar de cemento”!) They confirmed their environmental characterization of cities, and found, as expected, that lizards perched on wider surfaces, did have more lamellae, and had longer legs–a resounding success. Interestingly, they did not find a change in perch height distribution between urban and natural. My one query would be about the change in lamellae number. High lamellae number is associated with narrower perch diameters– the numerous lamellae allowing the toepad to curl round to conform to the curved shape of the narrower perch (as shown in trunk crown anoles having more lamellae than similar-sized trunk ground anoles). I’ll have to think about what exactly I would expect in a trunk ground lizard adapting to man-made surfaces.

Kristin mentioned that they are planning a common garden experiment to test whther the differences have a genetic basis, as opposed to representing phenotypic plasticity. So we can look forward to more interesting results from this project.

Evolution 2014: Physiological Divergence and Adaptive Radiation

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Alex Gunderson asked the question: What ecological axes are involved in ecological divergence during adaptive radiation, and what phenotypic traits occur along them?

Here are the specific questions he investigated:

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Alex pointed out that we usually talk about the ecomorphs that have diverged to use different parts of the structural habitat (e.g., twigs, canopy, grass, etc.), but less attenion is paid to divergence along the thermal niche axis, yet since Ruibal’s work in the early 1960’s, we’ve known such divergence occurs. Morphological divergence allows species to coexist by using different structural microhabitats; does divergence in thermal physiology have the same effect?

Most of the research involved the Puerto Rican cristatellus group, in which there are four pairs of sister species that differ in thermal environment, one more in the sun, one more a shade species. Some data also included Jamaican anoles. The study focused on two aspects of physiology related to thermal niche use, the critical thermal maximum temperature (CtMax) and the optimal temperature for sprint performance (Topt).

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Results: In 3 of 4 sister taxa, the species in the warmer environment had a higher CtMax. In 2 of 4, the species had a higher optimal temperature (in both cases, in the other comparisons, the species did not differ statistically).

Q2: What are the performance consequences of physiological divergence?

Alex measured temperatures in shaded and open habitats and asked what the risk was of a species overheating in each habitat. In shaded habitats, no species were at risk of overheating, but in open habitats, for three pairs of sister taxa, the species from the cooler environment was at greater risk of lethal overheating.

Q3: Does physiological divergence promote species co-occurrence?

In cases where morphologically similar species co-occur (same ecomorph), do they diverge in physiology? The answer: Invariably yes in Puerto Rico and Jamaica. When morphologically similar species co-occur, they always differ in thermal physiology. Thus, thermal physiological differentiation seems to be important for increasing local species richness.

Q4: How quickly does physiology evolve relative to morphology?

Surprisingly (at least to me), physiology evolves considerably more slowly than morphlogy.

Summarizing across this work, Alex concluded that physiological differentiation may be an important component of adaptive radiation. In many cases, workers studying adaptive radiation focus on morphology for a number of reasons, not the least of which that it is much easier to measure. But, by doing so, they may be missing an important part of the puzzle.

Evolution 2014: A New Method for Placing Species of Interest that Lack DNA on a DNA-Based Phylogeny, Illustrated by Anolis roosevelti

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Liam Revell gave a talk entitled “Placing cryptic, recently extinct, or hypothesized taxa in an ultrametric phylogeny using continuous charater data: a case study.” The title pretty much says it all and is a report on an ongoing project conducted with Luke Mahler, Graham Reynolds, and Graham Slater (sorry, I failed to think of anything clever about two authors named Graham. S’mores, anyone?).

The problem being addressed: we have a phylogeny for a group and want to add a taxon for which we only have continuous data, such as leg length, etc. How can we place it on the tree?

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The details are too technical for me to summarize (note: if you want to get to the good, anole stuff and don’t care about the method, skip to the next paragraph), but entails using a likelihood formula that Felsenstein developed for building trees with continuous characters (another note: you must have continuous characters for all taxa). The method works by considering all possible placements of the missing species. It computes the likelihood of the model and tree conditioned on the dataset to find the maximum likelihood tree including the taxon of interest that is consistent with the tree based on nuclear data for the other taxa (note that the tree must be ultrametric). Liam reported that even for trees with 100 or more taxa, an approximately exhaustive search for the ML position of the tip taxon is possible. Because the tree is ultrametric, all we’re interested in is where the attachment on the tree occurs, because the branch length is then determined by the ultrametricity of the tree.

Liam assured the audience that the drawing was not of co-author Graham Slater

Liam assured the audience that the drawing was not of co-author Graham Slater

Now for the good stuff: the method was illustrated with regard to Anolis roosevelti, the feared-extinct crown giant anole of the Puerto Rican bank. Known from only eight specimens and last collected in the 1930’s, things don’t look good for roosevelti. It has been assumed to be closely related to the Puerto Rican crown-giant, A. cuvieri, which it does look like. Moreover, Steve Poe’s morphological phylogeny supports this placement.

The analysis can reject many potential placements of roosevelti, but many others are not ruled out statistically; i.e., the likelihood surface is flat particularly close to root of tree, not surprising given the extensive morphological convergence of anoles. However, for what it’s worth, placement of roosevelti as a close relative to cuvieri is ruled out.

It will be interesting to see how this project develops and whether these results hold. More importantly, someone needs to go out and find a living roosevelti.

Evolution 2014: Travis Ingram Receives Young Investigator Prize for Research on Adaptive Radiation

Travis Ingram in the field

At each of the Evolution meetings over the last few years, anole researchers have been honored with some of the major awards  (1, 2, 3) recognizing talented young scientists. That trend continued here in 2014, when Travis Ingram was named as one of the winners of the  American Society of Naturalists’ Jasper Loftus-Hills Young Investigator Prizes.

Travis made a 30-minute presentation on his work on adaptive radiation. This work has combined the development of new analytical methods along with detailed analysis of two systems, our beloved anoles as well as Pacific rockfishes. In particular, Travis spoke about research investigating two questions: the extent to which adaptive divergence occurs specifically during speciation events, and the degree to which within adaptive radiations, convergent evolution occurs to the same adaptive peaks. In considering this work, Travis also discussed the difference between what are called “alpha” niches, which refers to ecological differentiation between co-occurring species, and “beta” niches, which refers to ecological differences across a landscape or environmental gradient.

Travis first discussed the method in to determine the extent to which morphological variation among species evolved during speciation. Travis has already published work on rockfishes that shows that substantial proportions of morphological variation among species appears to have evolved during the speciation process. He then discussed new work asking the same question in anoles, which shows that variation in traditional ecomorph traits—related to differences in structural habitat use—seem to be little correlated with speciational evolution. In contrast, climatic niche evolution—the divergence that arises within ecomorph clades—seems to be largely speciational.

Travis then switched gears to discuss research on convergent evolution within adaptive radiations, for which he and colleagues have developed a new method, Surface. Application of this work to Greater Antillean anoles—published in Science last year—shows that there have been 29 peak shifts in anoles, that there are 15 separate adaptive peaks, and that eight of these peaks have been occupied convergently. Moreover, Travis pointed out that even though the method does not start out with a priori categorization of species to ecomorph, the tradition ecomorph categories are for the most part recovered in the analysis, with some exceptions.

Travis then presented new work applying the same method to rockfish radiations on both sides of the Pacific in the northern hemisphere. Again, many convergent peaks were found; however, of the nine convergent peaks, eight were occupied by multiple lineages with a lineage, and only one occupied by lineages in both regions. This work was published this year in the American Naturalist.

Travis summarized by noting the interesting differences found in the two aspects of adaptive radiation he studies. His work indicates that axes related to environmental gradients, i.e., the beta niche illustrating differences across space, are related to speciational evolution, whereas traits related to alpha niche (microhabitat partitioning) are related to convergence within radiations.

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