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Honest signals and sexual conflict: Female lizards carry undesirable indicators of quality. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how sex differences in coloration in eastern fence lizards are influenced by hormonal and physiological factors, revealing that males have more vibrant color badges due to testosterone while females exhibit a less costly version of this trait.
  • It finds that color saturation in males is linked to better body condition and immune function, whereas female coloration does not show the same relationship, suggesting different resource allocation strategies between the sexes.
  • The research suggests that the regulation of these color traits by nonsex hormones might contribute to ongoing sexual conflict over resource investment in ornamentation, as females experience reproductive costs associated with their color features.

Article Abstract

Sex differences in animal coloration often result from sex-dependent regulatory mechanisms. Still, some species exhibit incomplete sexual dimorphism as females carry a rudimentary version of a costly male trait, leading to intralocus sexual conflict. The underlying physiology and condition dependence of these traits can inform why such conflicts remain unresolved. In eastern fence lizards (), blue iridophore badges are found in males and females, but melanin pigmentation underneath and surrounding badges is male-exclusive. We track color saturation and area of badges across sexual maturity, and their relationship to individual quality (body condition and immunocompetence) and relevant hormones (testosterone and corticosterone). Saturation and testosterone were positively correlated in both sexes, but hormone and trait had little overlap between males and females. Saturation was correlated with body condition and immunocompetence in males but not in females. Co-regulation by androgens may have released females from resource allocation costs of color saturation, even when in high condition. Badge area was independent of testosterone, but associated with low corticosterone in females, indicating that a nonsex hormone underlies incomplete sexual dimorphism. Given the evidence in this species for female reproductive costs associated with ornamentation, this sex-nonspecific regulation of an honest signal may underlie intralocus sexual conflict.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8216924PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7598DOI Listing

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