AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study examines how changes in one sensory signal, specifically the loss of a colorful belly patch in some lizards, can affect their behavioral responses to other signals, like chemical scents from other lizards or visual cues from live lizards.
  • - Researchers conducted field experiments with 11 lizard species and found that those lacking the colorful belly patch increased their responses to chemical scents, unlike species that still had the patch.
  • - The findings suggest that the loss of visual signals can enhance reliance on chemical cues, indicating that different sensory modalities may interact and impact the evolution of communication in lizards.

Article Abstract

Behavioural responses to communicative signals combine input from multiple sensory modalities and signal compensation theory predicts that evolutionary shifts in one sensory modality could impact the response to signals in other sensory modalities. Here, we conducted two types of field experiments with 11 species spread across the lizard genus to test the hypothesis that the loss of visual signal elements affects behavioural responses to a chemical signal (conspecific scents) or to a predominantly visual signal (a conspecific lizard), both of which are used in intraspecific communication. We found that three species that have independently lost a visual signal trait, a colourful belly patch, responded to conspecific scents with increased chemosensory behaviour compared to a chemical control, while species with the belly patch did not. However, most species, with and without the belly patch, responded to live conspecifics with increased visual displays of similar magnitude. While aggressive responses to visual stimuli are taxonomically widespread in , our results suggest that increased chemosensory response behaviour is linked to colour patch loss. Thus, interactions across sensory modalities could constrain the evolution of complex signalling phenotypes, thereby influencing signal diversity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8059972PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2021.0256DOI Listing

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