Literature DB >> 18060654

Parasites and health affect multiple sexual signals in male common wall lizards, Podarcis muralis.

José Martín1, Luisa Amo, Pilar López.   

Abstract

Multiple advertising sexual traits may either advertise different characteristics of male condition or be redundant to reinforce reliability of signals. Research has focused on multiple visual traits. However, in animals that use different multiple additional sensory systems, such as chemoreception, different types of traits might have evolved to signal similar characteristics of a male quality using different sensory channels. We examined whether ventral coloration and chemicals in femoral gland secretions of male common wall lizards, Podarcis muralis, are affected by their health state (blood-parasite load and cell-mediated immune response). Our results indicated that less parasitized lizards had brighter and more yellowish ventral colorations and also femoral secretions with higher proportions of two esters of octadecenoic acid. In addition, lizards with a greater immune response had more saturated coloration and secretions with higher proportions of octadecenoic acid methyl ester. We suggest that these signals would be reliable because only healthier males seemed able to allocate more carotenoids to coloration and presumably costly chemicals to secretions. The use of multiple sensory channels may provide more opportunities to signal a male quality under different circumstances, but also may reinforce the reliability of the signal when both types of traits may be perceived simultaneously.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18060654     DOI: 10.1007/s00114-007-0328-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Naturwissenschaften        ISSN: 0028-1042


  27 in total

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Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2003-01-08       Impact factor: 3.225

7.  Discrimination by female mice between the odours of parasitized and non-parasitized males.

Authors:  M Kavaliers; D D Colwell
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  16 in total

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5.  Red carotenoids and associated gene expression explain colour variation in frillneck lizards.

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7.  Blood parasites in two co-existing species of lizards (Zootoca vivipara and Lacerta agilis).

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8.  Phenological variation in parasite load and inflammatory response in a lizard with an asynchronous reproductive cycle.

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9.  A structural colour ornament correlates positively with parasite load and body condition in an insular lizard species.

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10.  Negative correlation between nuptial throat colour and blood parasite load in male European green lizards supports the Hamilton-Zuk hypothesis.

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