Lizard threat display handicaps endurance.
نویسنده
چکیده
Honest-signalling theory asserts that threat displays reliably advertise attributes that influence fighting success. Endurance, as measured by treadmill performance, predicts the outcome of agonistic interactions among lizards. If threat displays in lizards function to advertise endurance capacity then variation in threat displays should correlate with endurance. I tested this prediction for the duration of threat posturing in male side-blotched lizards (Uta stansburiana) and examined whether threat displays act as quality handicaps, reliable signals that expend the attribute that is advertised. Individual variation in the duration of threat posturing correlated with endurance, while an experimental reduction of endurance diminished the duration of threat posturing. As expected of a quality handicap, endurance fell below baseline after display production. A restriction of aerobic metabolism can account for this effect. In threat posturing, lateral compression of the thorax may interfere with respiration or with circulation, limiting aerobic metabolism and causing a compensatory increase in anaerobic metabolism, thereby generating lactate and diminishing locomotor capacity. Concentrations of lactate measured after display production were higher than baseline, consistent with the proposed mechanism. By restricting aerobic metabolism, the threat posture can act as a quality handicap, simultaneously advertising and expending the endurance capacity of displaying lizards.
منابع مشابه
Thermal dependence of endurance and locomotory energetics in a lizard.
The thermal dependencies of endurance and the rates of oxygen cnsumption (VO2) and carbon dioxide production (VCO2) were determined for the lizard Dipsosaurus dorsalis walking on a treadmill. The thermal dependencies of endurance and maximal VO2 (VO2 max) are nerly identical. The maximal sustainable speed and the speed at which VO2 max is attained at each experimental body temperature are the s...
متن کاملSexual Dimorphisms in Aggressive Signal Structure and Use by a Polygynous Lizard, Anolis carolinensis
Unlike many polygynous species, we found that females of the lizard, Anolis carolinensis, have the same repertoire of aggressive signals as males. These shared signals included three stereotyped headbob display patterns (types A, B, and C) that were performed with no significant intersexual difference in amplitude displacement. However, we did find the following sexual dimorphisms in signal str...
متن کاملImpostor fears: Links with self-presentational concerns and self-handicapping behaviours
Two studies examined impostor fears, self-handicapping and self-presentational concerns. In Study 1 (113 women, 52 men), impostor fears were significantly related to social desirability (low self-deception over impression management), perfectionistic cognitions, and non-display of imperfection to others. In Study 2, 72 women were exposed either to face-saving failure (failure that was did not i...
متن کاملLocomotor Performance and Activity Energetics of Helodermatid Lizards
Locomotor performance and activity energetics were analyzed in 19 individual helodermatid lizards ranging in mass from 24.5-1220 g. We measured maximum sprint speeds, endurance on a treadmill, cost of transport, and aerobic capacity (rO2max) at a mean body temperature of 30.8 C. The maximum sprint speed for both Heloderma species averaged 1.7 km/h, which is among the lowest recorded for lizards...
متن کاملLaboratory endurance capacity predicts variation in field locomotor behaviour among lizard species.
I measured locomotor endurance capacities of lizards on a motorized treadmill in the laboratory and compared average values for different species with quantitative measures of their movement in the field (percentage of time moving, N=15 species; moves/min, N=13; daily movement distance, N=11). I hypothesized that endurance would be positively related to all three movement indices. Relationships...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Proceedings. Biological sciences
دوره 270 1519 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2003