| Literature DB >> 22905109 |
Troy A Baird1, Teresa D Baird, Richard Shine.
Abstract
Theory predicts the evolution of alternative male social tactics when intense competition coupled with the superior competitive ability of some individuals limits access to reproductive opportunities by others. How selection has shaped alternative social tactics may be especially interesting in long-lived species where size among sexually mature males varies markedly. We conducted experimental studies on long-lived eastern Australian water dragons living where competition was intense to test the hypotheses that mature males adopt alternative social tactics that are plastic, and that large size and body condition determine resource-holding potential. Approximately one-half of mature males (N = 14) defended territories using high rates of patrol and advertisement display, whereas 16 smaller mature males having lower body condition indices utilized non-territorial social tactics. Although territorial males were larger in absolute size and head dimensions, their heads were not allometrically larger. Territorial males advertised very frequently using displays involving stereotypical movements of the head and dewlap. More aggressive displays were given infrequently during baseline social conditions, but increased during periods of social instability. Female home ranges overlapped those of several territorial and non-territorial males, but females interacted more frequently with territorial males. The extreme plasticity of social tactics in this species that are dependent on body size was confirmed by two instances when relatively large non-territorial males spontaneously evicted territory owners, and by marked shifts in tactics by non-territorial males in response to temporary experimental removals of territory owners, followed (usually) by their expulsion when original owners were reinstated. The high level of social plasticity in this population where same-sex competitors are densely concentrated in preferred habitat suggests that chronic high energetic costs of defense may select for males to cycle between territorial and non-territorial social tactics depending upon their changing energetic status and their current capacity for competition with rivals.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22905109 PMCID: PMC3414507 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0041819
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Principal component factor loadings for social behavioral variables during baseline conditions.
| Behavioral Variable | Factor 1(58.8%) | Factor 2(24.9%) |
| Patrol (m/h) |
| 0.310 |
| Total displays/min |
| −0.007 |
| Aggresssive encounters Initiated/min | −0.269 |
|
| % contests won or tied |
| 0.120 |
Parenthetical numbers are the percent of total variance explained by each factor. High loading factors are in boldface.
Behavior of male water dragons during baseline social conditions.
| Behavioral Variable | Non-Territorial ( | Territorial ( | |
| Patrol (m/h) | 13.3 (1.8) | * | 26.4 (3.2) |
| Aggressive encounters/min | 0.021 (0.004) | 0.033 (0.009) | |
| Head-up displays/min | 0.03 (0.01) | * | 0.18 (0.02) |
| Head-bob displays/min | 0.13 (0.04) | * | 0.81 (0.10) |
| Total displays/min | 0.16 (0.05) | * | 1.01 (0.46) |
| % wins + draws | 7.2 (2.9) | * | 90.4 (4.9) |
Data are means ±1.0 standard error. Asterisks indicate statistically significant differences (P – values = 0.05–0.0001) between territorial and non-territorial males.
Principal component factor loadings for male water dragon morphometric variables.
| Non Size-Corrected | Size-Corrected | |||||
| Morphometric Variable | Factor 1(54.9%) | Factor 2(13.7%) | Factor 3(12.2%) | Factor 1(34.3%) | Factor 2(17.2%) | Factor 3(14.8%) |
| Snout-to-vent length |
| 0.095 | 0.087 | – | – | – |
| Body mass |
| −0.442 | −0.067 |
| −0.455 | 0.066 |
| Tail length | −0.005 | −0.495 |
| −0.038 | −0.533 |
|
| Head width |
| −0.136 | −0.016 |
| −0.006 | 0.052 |
| Head length |
| 0.041 | −0.054 |
| 0.356 | 0.036 |
| Head height |
| −0.276 | −0.080 |
| −0.098 | 0.239 |
| Cumulative dorsal crest length |
| 0.114 | −0.340 |
| 0.475 | −0.064 |
| Hind leg length | 0.350 |
| 0.384 | −0.347 |
| 0.338 |
| Front leg length |
| 0.256 | 0.343 | −0.127 | 0.196 |
|
Parenthetical values are the percent variance explained by each factor. High loading factor scores are in boldface.
Use of space by territorial and non-territorial male, and female water dragons.
| Spatial Variable | Non-Territorial Males ( | Territorial Males ( | Females ( | ||
| Area (m2) | 731.9 (154.1) | * | 434.9 (40.9)+ | * | 174.2 (18.8) |
| % area exclusive from consexuals | 0(0.0) | 78.5 (5.1) | 15.2 (3.8) | ||
| Ratio of home range shoreline to perimeter | 0.48 (0.49)++ | * | 0.34 (0.46) | * | 0.31 (0.22) |
Data are means ±1.0 SE. Asterisks indicate statistically significant differences (P<0.05) between adjacent columns. The single plus sign indicates a significant difference between territorial males and females, double plus sign indicates a statistical difference between non-territorial males and females.
Responses by non-territorial water dragon males to temporary removal and reinstatement of individual territorial males.
| Variable | Pre-Removal | During Removal | Reinstatement | ||
| Displays/min + | 0.27 (0.07) | * | 1.81 (0.14) | * | 0.52 (0.17) |
| Patrol (m/h) | 15.5 (3.4) | * | 61.8 (7.5) | * | 29.7 (9.3) |
| % wins + draws + | 17.8 (7.2) | * | 79.4 (9.3) | * | 16.7 (11.2) |
Data are means ±1.0 standard errors. Plus signs indicate statistically significant effects (Repeated measures ANOVA, P<0.001) of experimental phase. Asterisks indicate statistically significant differences (P<0.05) between adjacent columns.
Figure 1Male water dragons engaged in a prolonged escalated contest.