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Dryad

Dewlap color variation in Anolis sagrei is maintained among habitats within islands of the West Indies

Cite this dataset

Scherrer, Raphaël et al. (2022). Dewlap color variation in Anolis sagrei is maintained among habitats within islands of the West Indies [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.bcc2fqzf4

Abstract

Animal signals evolve in an ecological context. Locally adapting animal sexual signals can be especially important for initiating or reinforcing reproductive isolation during the early stages of speciation. Previous studies have demonstrated that dewlap color in Anolis lizards can be highly variable between populations in relation to both biotic and abiotic adaptive drivers at relatively large geographical scales. Here, we investigated differentiation of dewlap coloration among habitat types at a small spatial scale, within multiple islands of the West Indies, to test the hypothesis that similar local adaptive processes occur over smaller spatial scales. We explored variation in dewlap coloration in the most widespread species of anole, Anolis sagrei, across three characteristic habitats spanning the Bahamas and the Cayman Islands, namely beach scrub, primary coppice forest and mangrove forest. Using reflectance spectrometry paired with supervised machine learning, we found significant differences in spectral properties of the dewlap between habitats within small islands, sometimes over very short distances. Passive divergence in dewlap phenotype associated with isolation-by-distance did not explain our results. On the other hand, these habitat-specific dewlap differences varied in magnitude and direction across islands, and thus our primary test for adaptation -- parallel responses across islands -- was not supported. We suggest that neutral processes or selection could be involved in several ways, including sexual selection. Our results shed new light on the scale at which signal color polymorphism can be maintained in the presence of gene flow, and the relative role of local adaptation and other processes in driving these patterns.

Methods

The reflectance data in this repository were collected with a reflectance spectrometer on lizard dewlaps captured on several islands across the Bahamas and the Cayman Islands. We provide the raw data as well as processed data, with the script used to process the data. Processing involved, among other things, smoothing and artifact correction of reflectance curves to increase signal-to-noise ratio. More details are available in the README files within the repository.

Usage notes

All the information needed to reuse our data can be found in the README files within this repository, in the original article accepted in the Journal of Evolutionary Biology, and in the headers and comments of the R scripts provided with the data.