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Length of activity season drives geographic variation in body size of a widely distributed lizard
Authors:Terézia Horváthová  Christopher R Cooney  Patrick S Fitze  Tuula A Oksanen  Du?an Jeli?  Ioan Ghira  Tobias Uller  David Jandzik
Institution:1. Department of Zoology, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Comenius University in Bratislava, , 842 15 Bratislava, Slovakia;2. Edward Grey Institute, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, , OX1 3PS Oxford, U.K;3. Department of Ecology and Evolution (DEE), Biophore, Université de Lausanne, , 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland;4. Department of Biodiversity & Evolutionary Biology, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (MNCN–CSIC), , 28006 Madrid, Spain;5. Instituto Pirenaico de Ecología (IPE‐CSIC), , 22700 Jaca, Spain;6. Fundación Araid, , 50004 Zaragoza, Spain;7. Department of Biological & Environmental Science, Centre of Excellence in Evolutionary Research, University of Jyv?skyl?, , FI‐40014 Jyv?skyl?, Finland;8. Croatian Institute for Biodiversity, Croatian Herpetological Society HYLA, , HR‐10000 Zagreb, Croatia;9. Faculty of Biology & Geology, Babes‐Bolyai University Cluj‐Napoca, , 400084 Cluj, Romania;10. Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology (EBIO), University of Colorado, , 80309‐0334 Boulder, CO, USA
Abstract:Understanding the factors that drive geographic variation in life history is an important challenge in evolutionary ecology. Here, we analyze what predicts geographic variation in life‐history traits of the common lizard, Zootoca vivipara, which has the globally largest distribution range of all terrestrial reptile species. Variation in body size was predicted by differences in the length of activity season, while we found no effects of environmental temperature per se. Females experiencing relatively short activity season mature at a larger size and remain larger on average than females in populations with relatively long activity seasons. Interpopulation variation in fecundity was largely explained by mean body size of females and reproductive mode, with viviparous populations having larger clutch size than oviparous populations. Finally, body size‐fecundity relationship differs between viviparous and oviparous populations, with relatively lower reproductive investment for a given body size in oviparous populations. While the phylogenetic signal was weak overall, the patterns of variation showed spatial effects, perhaps reflecting genetic divergence or geographic variation in additional biotic and abiotic factors. Our findings emphasize that time constraints imposed by the environment rather than ambient temperature play a major role in shaping life histories in the common lizard. This might be attributed to the fact that lizards can attain their preferred body temperature via behavioral thermoregulation across different thermal environments. Length of activity season, defining the maximum time available for lizards to maintain optimal performance, is thus the main environmental factor constraining growth rate and annual rates of mortality. Our results suggest that this factor may partly explain variation in the extent to which different taxa follow ecogeographic rules.
Keywords:Bergmann's rule  ecogeographic variation  life‐history traits  reptiles  thermoregulation
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