Deakin University
Browse

Color change for Thermoregulation versus camouflage in free-ranging lizards

Download (625.56 kB)
Version 2 2024-06-03, 13:18
Version 1 2016-11-24, 15:15
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 13:18 authored by KR Smith, V Cadena, John EndlerJohn Endler, MR Kearney, WP Porter, D Stuart-Fox
Animal coloration has multiple functions including thermoregulation, camouflage, and social signaling, and the requirements of each function may sometimes conflict. Many terrestrial ectotherms accommodate the multiple functions of color through color change. However, the relative importance of these functions and how colorchanging species accommodate themwhen they do conflict are poorly understood because we lack data on color change in the wild. Here, we show that the color of individual radio-tracked bearded dragon lizards, Pogona vitticeps, correlates strongly with background color and less strongly, but significantly, with temperature. We found no evidence that individuals simultaneously optimize camouflage and thermoregulation by choosing light backgrounds when hot or dark backgrounds when cold. In laboratory experiments, lizards showed both UV-visible (300–700 nm) and near-infrared (700–2,100 nm) reflectance changes in response to different background and temperature treatments, consistent with camouflage and thermoregulatory functions, respectively, but with no interaction between the two. Overall, our results suggest that wild bearded dragons change color to improve both thermoregulation and camouflage but predominantly adjust for camouflage, suggesting that compromising camouflage may entail a greater potential immediate survival cost.

History

Journal

American naturalist

Volume

188

Pagination

668-678

Location

Chicago, Ill.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0003-0147

eISSN

1537-5323

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, University of Chicago

Issue

6

Publisher

University of Chicago Press