AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how body size variation in lizards is influenced by reproductive mode, ancestry, and climate, focusing on the common lizard with both viviparous and oviparous lineages.
  • Using data from over 10,000 lizards across 72 populations, the research finds that female size and sexual size dimorphism (SSD) are more significantly affected by reproductive mode and climate than male size, which showed minimal variation.
  • The analysis reveals a complex relationship between female body size, SSD, and seasonal climate, with viviparous populations displaying a unique geographic pattern that reflects their adaptation to environmental constraints on growth and reproduction.

Article Abstract

Reproductive mode, ancestry, and climate are hypothesized to determine body size variation in reptiles but their effects have rarely been estimated simultaneously, especially at the intraspecific level. The common lizard () occupies almost the entire Northern Eurasia and includes viviparous and oviparous lineages, thus representing an excellent model for such studies. Using body length data for >10,000 individuals from 72 geographically distinct populations over the species' range, we analyzed how sex-specific adult body size and sexual size dimorphism (SSD) is associated with reproductive mode, lineage identity, and several climatic variables. Variation in male size was low and poorly explained by our predictors. In contrast, female size and SSD varied considerably, demonstrating significant effects of reproductive mode and particularly seasonality. Populations of the western oviparous lineage (northern Spain, south-western France) exhibited a smaller female size and less female-biased SSD than those of the western viviparous (France to Eastern Europe) and the eastern viviparous (Eastern Europe to Far East) lineages; this pattern persisted even after controlling for climatic effects. The phenotypic response to seasonality was complex: across the lineages, as well as within the eastern viviparous lineage, female size and SSD increase with increasing seasonality, whereas the western viviparous lineage followed the opposing trends. Altogether, viviparous populations seem to follow a saw-tooth geographic cline, which might reflect the nonmonotonic relationship of body size at maturity in females with the length of activity season. This relationship is predicted to arise in perennial ectotherms as a response to environmental constraints caused by seasonality of growth and reproduction. The SSD allometry followed the converse of Rensch's rule, a rare pattern for amniotes. Our results provide the first evidence of opposing body sizeclimate relationships in intraspecific units.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7297768PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6077DOI Listing

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