AI Article Synopsis

  • Many organisms communicate through various sensory signals, and losing one signal over time can affect the signaling system and sensory organs involved.
  • In Sceloporus lizards, species that have lost a male coloration signal displayed increased reliance on chemical signaling, prompting research on whether this loss correlates with changes in the vomeronasal organ (VNO) size.
  • Unexpectedly, the study found that species retaining the color patch had similar VNO sizes compared to those that lost it, suggesting that the increase in chemosensory behavior may compensate for the loss of visual signals, while body size plays a significant role in VNO volume.

Article Abstract

Many organisms communicate using signals in different sensory modalities (multicomponent or multimodal). When one signal or component is lost over evolutionary time, it may be indicative of changes in other characteristics of the signalling system, including the sensory organs used to perceive and process signals. Sceloporus lizards predominantly use chemical and visual signals to communicate, yet some species have lost the ancestral ventral colour patch used in male-male agonistic interactions and exhibit increased chemosensory behaviour. Here, we asked whether evolutionary loss of this sexual signal is associated with larger vomeronasal organ (VNO) volumes (an organ that detects chemical scents) compared with species that have retained the colour patch. We measured VNO coronal section areas of 7-8 adult males from each of 11 Sceloporus species (4 that lost and 7 that retained the colour patch), estimated sensory and total epithelium volume, and compared volumes using phylogenetic analysis of covariance, controlling for body size. Contrary to expectations, we found that species retaining the ventral patch had similar relative VNO volumes as did species that had lost the ancestral patch, and that body size explains VNO epithelium volume. Visual signal loss may be sufficiently compensated for by increased chemosensory behaviour, and the allometric pattern may indicate sensory system trade-offs for large-bodied species.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jeb/voad002DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

body size
12
species lost
12
colour patch
12
vomeronasal organ
8
visual signal
8
sceloporus lizards
8
lost ancestral
8
increased chemosensory
8
chemosensory behaviour
8
vno volumes
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!