1 results match your criteria: "University of California at Santa Cruz 1156 High St.[Affiliation]"
Ecol Evol
July 2013
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California at Santa Cruz 1156 High St., Santa Cruz, California, 95064.
Natural populations respond to selection pressures like increasing local temperatures in many ways, including plasticity and adaptation. To predict the response of ectotherms like lizards to local temperature increase, it is essential to estimate phenotypic variation in and determine the heritability of temperature-related traits like average field body temperature (T b) and preferred temperature (T p). We measured T p of Uta stansburiana in a laboratory thermal gradient and assessed the contribution of sex, reproductive status and throat color genotype to phenotypic variation in T b of adult lizards.
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