Data from: Vomeronasal organ volume increases with body size and is dissociated with loss of a visual signal in Sceloporus lizards
Data files
Oct 03, 2023 version files 19.21 KB
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11Sp-NoSvar_Red2.tre
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DryadData_IndividualVolumes.xlsx
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README.md
Oct 17, 2023 version files 5.43 GB
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11Sp-NoSvar_Red2.tre
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Coronal_Section_Images.zip
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DryadData_IndividualVolumes.csv
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README.md
Abstract
Many organisms communicate using signals in different sensory modalities (multicomponent or multimodal). When one signal or component is lost over evolutionary time, it may be indicative of changes in other characteristics of the signaling system, including the sensory organs used to perceive and process signals. Sceloporus lizards predominantly use chemical and visual signals to communicate, yet some species have lost the ancestral ventral color patch used in male-male agonistic interactions and exhibit increased chemosensory behavior. Here, we asked whether evolutionary loss of this sexual signal is associated with larger vomeronasal organ (VNO) volumes (an organ that detects chemical scents) compared to species that have retained the color patch. We measured VNO coronal section areas of 7–8 adult males from each of 11 Sceloporus species (4 that lost and 7 that retained the color patch), estimated sensory and total epithelium volume, and compared volumes using phylogenetic ANCOVA, controlling for body size. Contrary to expectations, we found that species retaining the ventral patch had similar relative VNO volumes as did species that have lost the ancestral patch, and that body size explains VNO epithelium volume. Visual signal loss may be sufficiently compensated for by increased chemosensory behavior, and the allometric pattern may indicate sensory system trade-offs for large-bodied species.
README: Data from: Vomeronasal organ volume increases with body size and is dissociated with loss of a visual signal in Sceloporus lizards
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.dncjsxm5f
Dataset (.csv file) includes body size (snout-vent length) measures for each individual lizard, as well as estimates of vomeronasal organ sensory and total epithelium volumes for each individual. Species names are included, and individuals are also identified as colorful-bellied or white-bellied. The '.tre' file includes the phylogeny used for PANCOVA analyses.
Description of the data and file structure
Column labels:
- Species Species name belonging to genus Sceloporus
- Idnum Unique identification code for an individual lizard
- SVL Snout-vent length measured in mm
- Sensvol Vomeronasal sensory epithelium volume in cubic mm
- Totvol Vomeronasal total epithelium volume in cubic mm
- Color 1 = white-bellied (no ventral sexual signal), 0 = colorful-bellied (ventral sexual signal present)
Pruned phylogeny for 11 Sceloporus species based on Leaché et al.’s (2016) phylogeny, and inferred ancestral states for belly color as in Ossip-Drahos et al. (2016). We made the tree ultrametric using the Grafen (1989) computation of branch lengths as implemented by the compute.brlen function in the ‘ape’ package in R Statistical Software.
We also include the coronal section images for every individual used in this study. Folder names represent the individual as indicated in the '.csv' file (corresponding species included).
References:
- Grafen, A. 1989. The phylogenetic regression. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences 326: 119–157.
- Leaché, A.D., Banbury, B.L., Linkem, C.W. & de Oca, A.N.M. 2016. Phylogenomics of a rapid radiation: is chromosomal evolution linked to increased diversification in north american spiny lizards (Genus Sceloporus)? BMC Evolutionary Biology 16: 63.
- Ossip-Drahos, A.G., Oyola Morales, J.R., Vital-García, C., Zúñiga-Vega, J.J., Hews, D.K. & Martins, E.P. 2016. Shaping communicative colour signals over evolutionary time. Royal Society Open Science 3: 160728.
- R Core Team. 2021. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria.
Methods
All details regarding data collection and preprocessing can be found in the associated manuscript.