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A comparison of evolutionary radiations in Mainland and West Indian Anolis lizards. Ecology

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TLDR
Findings demonstrate that factors that caused anole species to converge repeatedly in the West Indies are not present in mainland regions, and that environmental factors can strongly influence the shape of evolutionary radiations.
Abstract
Comparisons between closely related radiations in different environments provide a unique window into understanding how abiotic and biotic factors shape evolutionary pathways. Anolis lizards have radiated extensively in the West Indies, as well as mainland Central and South America. In the Caribbean, similar communities of anole species specialized for different habitats (ecomorphs) have evolved independently on each Greater Antillean island. We examined ecological and morphological data on 49 Anolis species (33 Caribbean, 16 mainland) to investigate whether the same set of ecomorphs has arisen in mainland regions. More generally, we investigated whether the relationship between ecology and morphology was similar among anoles in the two regions. Radiations in the two regions are very different. The majority of mainland anole species exhibit morphological characteristics unlike any Caribbean ecomorph. Furthermore, relationships between ecology and morphology are very different between the two sets of anole species. Among mainland anole species, toepad size is positively correlated with perch height, whereas tail length is negatively related to perch diameter. In contrast, among Caribbean anole species, both forelimb length and body mass are positively associated with perch diameter, and both tail length and hindlimb length are negatively related to perch diameter. Biomechanical considerations provide a functional basis for some of these correlations, but much variation remains to be explained. These findings demonstrate that factors that caused anole species to converge repeatedly in the West Indies are not present in mainland regions, and that environmental factors can strongly influence the shape of evolutionary radiations.

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Evolutionary implications of phenotypic plasticity in the hindlimb of the lizard Anolis sagrei.

TL;DR: Not only is hindlimb length a plastic trait in these lizards, but that this plasticity leads to the production of phenotypes appropriate to particular environments, which potentially could have played an important role in the early stages of the Caribbean anole radiation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Testing the hypothesis that a clade has adaptively radiated: iguanid lizard clades as a case study.

TL;DR: It is argued that the term “adaptive radiation” should be reserved for those clades that are exceptionally diverse in terms of the range of habitats occupied and attendant morphological adaptations; and a test, focusing on disparity in the ecological morphology of monophyletic groups within the lizard family Iguanidae, is proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Testing the island effect in adaptive radiation: rates and patterns of morphological diversification in Caribbean and mainland Anolis lizards

TL;DR: Comparisons of patterns and rates of morphological evolution found that rates and extent of diversification were comparable, but Anolis adaptive radiation is not an island phenomenon; in independent colonizations of both island and mainland habitats, island anoles have evolved shorter limbs and better-developed toe pads.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolutionary consequences of ecological release in caribbean anolis lizards

TL;DR: It is proposed that ancestral species in the Greater Antilles may have been trunk-crown anoles, although some species exhibit morphologies unlike those seen in Greater Antillean species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolutionary correlations among morphology, habitat use and clinging performance in Caribbean Anolis lizards

TL;DR: Comparisons among the size of the subdigital toepad, clinging ability and perch height in 12 species of Caribbean Anolis lizard provide indirect comparative evidence that the evolution of increased toepad size in some anole species is adaptive, by facilitating the occupation of perches high in the canopy.
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