2023
DOI: 10.3390/ani13111788
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The Evolution of Diet and Morphology in Insular Lizards: Insights from a Replicated Island Introduction Experiment

Abstract: Resource-limited environments may drive the rapid evolution of phenotypic traits and ecological preferences optimizing the exploitation of resources. Very small islands are often characterized by reduced food availability, seasonal fluctuations in resources and strong unpredictability. These features may drive the evolution of phenotypic traits such as high bite forces, allowing animals to exploit a wider variety of the available resources. They may also lead to more generalist dietary patterns in response to … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…In fact, the identification of outlier loci at genes that could play a role in diet‐induced adaptation is in agreement with the idea that a combination of phenotypic plasticity and directional selection underlies the ecological and phenotypic divergence of the Pod Mrčaru population (Herrel et al., 2008 ; Vervust et al., 2010 ). A reciprocal transplant experiment would be a great approach to elucidating the role of these processes on the observed phenotypic differences between lizards on these islands (Donihue et al., 2023 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, the identification of outlier loci at genes that could play a role in diet‐induced adaptation is in agreement with the idea that a combination of phenotypic plasticity and directional selection underlies the ecological and phenotypic divergence of the Pod Mrčaru population (Herrel et al., 2008 ; Vervust et al., 2010 ). A reciprocal transplant experiment would be a great approach to elucidating the role of these processes on the observed phenotypic differences between lizards on these islands (Donihue et al., 2023 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%