2016
DOI: 10.1086/686055
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Life-History Patterns of Lizards of the World

Abstract: Identification of mechanisms that promote variation in life-history traits is critical to understand the evolution of divergent reproductive strategies. Here we compiled a large life-history data set (674 lizard populations, representing 297 species from 263 sites globally) to test a number of hypotheses regarding the evolution of life-history traits in lizards. We found significant phylogenetic signal in most life-history traits, although phylogenetic signal was not particularly high. Climatic variables influ… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(60 citation statements)
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References 78 publications
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“…It could also act indirectly, via traits like head size; larger heads increase bite force and combat success in lizards (Herrel et al 1999, Scharf and Meiri 2013, Lopez-Darias et al 2014. Female lizards tend to have more clutches, spread through the year, in warm, aseasonal, environments (Mesquita et al 2016), which fits with this hypothesis and suggests that gradients in male sexual selection are not decoupled from female fecundity selection. Female lizards tend to have more clutches, spread through the year, in warm, aseasonal, environments (Mesquita et al 2016), which fits with this hypothesis and suggests that gradients in male sexual selection are not decoupled from female fecundity selection.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 62%
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“…It could also act indirectly, via traits like head size; larger heads increase bite force and combat success in lizards (Herrel et al 1999, Scharf and Meiri 2013, Lopez-Darias et al 2014. Female lizards tend to have more clutches, spread through the year, in warm, aseasonal, environments (Mesquita et al 2016), which fits with this hypothesis and suggests that gradients in male sexual selection are not decoupled from female fecundity selection. Female lizards tend to have more clutches, spread through the year, in warm, aseasonal, environments (Mesquita et al 2016), which fits with this hypothesis and suggests that gradients in male sexual selection are not decoupled from female fecundity selection.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 62%
“…When the breeding season is short, fecundity selection should favour larger clutches and/or offspring to maximize reproductive output during the limited reproductive season (Shine 1988, Pincheira-Donoso andTregenza 2011). If females in aseasonal environments lay many clutches throughout the year (Meiri et al 2012, Mesquita et al 2016, then sexual selection in males may be stronger as there are greater benefits to long-term control of high-quality territories or mates than if reproduction occurs in a short burst (Machado et al 2016). The strength of sexual selection via male-male competition may also vary with climate and may depend on female reproductive strategies.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This pattern is probably related to the lizards to constantly invest in reproduction (Colli 1991, Mesquita 2016a, and also suggests that large Phyllodactylidae communal nests will be mostly found in the Cerrado Figure 2. Phylogenetic relationships among currently recognized genera of Phyllodactylidae (number of species know to nest communally/ number of species in the genus).…”
Section: Gymnodactylus Amaralimentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Communal nesting has evolved independently several times during the history of squamates (Doody 2009), but appears to be particularly prevalent in geckos (Graves andDuvall 1995, Doody 2009). Clutch size is a phylogenetically conserved attribute in geckos (Vitt 1986, Sinervo 1994, and most species produce only one or two eggs at a time (Mesquita , 2016a, which is a relatively small number compared to most other lizard families (Mesquita 2016b). The repeated evolution of communal nesting in geckos might be a behavioral adaptation in response to this clutch size constraint, as it potentially increases female (Blouin-Demers 2004, Radder andShine 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%