@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref21311,
author = {Julienne Ng and Emily L. Landeen and Ryane M. Logsdon and Richard E Glor},
title = {Correlation between Anolis lizard dewlap phenotype and environmental variation indicates adaptive divergence of a signal important to sexual selection and species recognition},
year = {2012},
keywords = {Anolis distichus, adaptation, speciation, geographic variation, signal divergence},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Evolution},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Although the importance of signals involved in species recognition and sexual selection to speciation is widely recognized, the processes that underlie signal divergence are still a matter of debate. Several possible processes have been hypothesized, including genetic drift, arbitrary sexual selection and adaptation to local signaling environments. We use comparative analyses to investigate whether the remarkable geographic variation of dewlap color and pattern in Hispaniolan trunk Anolis lizards (Anolis distichus) is a result of adaptive signal divergence to heterogeneous environments. We recover a repeated pattern of divergence in A. distichus dewlap color, pattern and size with environmental variation across Hispaniola. These results are aligned with ecological models of signal divergence and provide strong evidence for dewlap adaptation to local signaling environments. We also find that A. distichus dewlaps vary with the environment in a different manner to other previously studied anoles, thus expanding upon previous predictions on the direction dewlaps will diverge in perceptual color space in response to the environment. }
}
Trees for Study 13336

Citation title:
"Correlation between Anolis lizard dewlap phenotype and environmental variation indicates adaptive divergence of a signal important to sexual selection and species recognition".

Study name:
"Correlation between Anolis lizard dewlap phenotype and environmental variation indicates adaptive divergence of a signal important to sexual selection and species recognition".

This study is part of submission 13336
(Status: Published).
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