AI Article Synopsis

  • Valentin's rock lizard is believed to be the parent species of several parthenogenetic rock lizard species, indicating complex evolutionary processes in their shared habitats.
  • This lizard species is long-lived and exhibits a distinctive size difference between genders, with females being larger, which is atypical for its genus.
  • They have adaptations for high-altitude living, such as larger eggs and early reproduction, and their population density can vary widely without being impacted by the presence of parthenogenic species.

Article Abstract

Valentin's rock lizard () is suggested to be the parent for several parthenogenetic species (e.g., , , and ) that evolved through hybridization. Complex evolutionary processes (including reticulate evolution) are occurring within the areas where Valentin's rock lizard coexists with these and other rock lizards. Hence, a detailed biological specification of this species is important for understanding how vertebrates evolve. Valentin's rock lizard is a long-lived (up to 9 years), small diurnal lizard with larger females than males, which is unlike other species of the genus. Their relatively large eggs and early reproduction period, which occurs just after emergence from winter shelters, are adaptations for living in a high elevation climate (higher than 2 000 m a.s.l.). Their body temperatures (31-32 °С) are comparable to body temperatures of rock lizards living in milder climates, though female body temperature is more dependent on substrate temperature and basking due to their lower activity than that found in males. Population density fluctuates from several individuals to several hundred per hectare and is not affected by parthenogen coexistence, although hybrids do occur in sexually biased populations where males are more common than females. The male home range is larger than that of females, though these home ranges broadly overlap. Prey is not limited in the mountain meadows and Valentin's rock lizards feed on a great variety of arthropods. Infanticide occurs in high-density populations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6680121PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2019.036DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Valentin's rock lizard is believed to be the parent species of several parthenogenetic rock lizard species, indicating complex evolutionary processes in their shared habitats.
  • This lizard species is long-lived and exhibits a distinctive size difference between genders, with females being larger, which is atypical for its genus.
  • They have adaptations for high-altitude living, such as larger eggs and early reproduction, and their population density can vary widely without being impacted by the presence of parthenogenic species.
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