Stable isotopes document mainland-island divergence in resource use without concomitant physiological changes in the lizard Liolaemus pictus.

Comp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol

Departamento de Ciencias Básicas, Universidad del Bío-Bío, Chillán, Chile.

Published: May 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Shifts in feeding ecology can lead to differences between island and mainland lizard subspecies, specifically in Liolaemus pictus found in Chile.
  • The study analyzed both stomach contents and nitrogen stable isotope ratios to examine dietary habits and found that mainland lizards had a higher trophic level despite shorter intestines and more active digestive enzymes compared to island lizards.
  • The findings indicate that while morphology and physiology differ among lizard populations, these differences are not necessarily linked to their feeding ecology, suggesting that behavioral adaptations may be the initial response to dietary changes.

Article Abstract

Shifts in feeding ecology are believed to promote island-mainland divergence. The lizard Liolaemus pictus has several different subspecies on Chilean islands and mainland. These subspecies inhabit contrastingly different habitats both in different islands and mainland, which suggests the potential for habitat related dietary variation. We investigated the dietary habits of L. pictus by both stomach content analyses and by nitrogen stable isotope analyses (delta(15)N), which we used as a proxy variable for trophic level. We also compared the morphology of the digestive tract and the activity of intestinal digestive enzymes of mainland and island lizards. We hypothesized differences in diet and trophic level among populations and that these differences would predict the expression of the morphological and biochemical features of the digestive tract. More specifically, we predicted shorter intestines and higher levels of peptidases in more insectivorous than in more frugivorous/herbivorous lizards. The diet of L. pictus was characterized by the consumption of a wide diversity of food types, including fruit and insects, in all populations. Stable isotopes revealed higher trophic level, and hence probably higher protein intake, in mainland than in island populations, but contrary to our prediction, they had shorter intestines and higher relative activity of intestinal peptidases than mainland lizards. Furthermore, the proportion of fruit items in the stomach content was higher in the population that exhibited the lowest tropic level. These results suggest that morphological and physiological differences among populations of L. pictus are not correlated with feeding ecology, suggesting that the lizard's first responses to the selective pressure represented by a diet shift are behavioral.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpb.2010.02.005DOI Listing

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