Date: September 6, 2018
Source: University of California - Santa Cruz
Side-blotched
lizards in most of the Mojave Desert have tan and brown markings that blend in
well with their desert surroundings. On the Pisgah Lava Flow, however, one
finds a very different population of side-blotched lizards, as black as the
rocks they live on.
How do
animals invade new environments different from the ones for which evolution has
equipped them with finely tuned adaptations? Light-colored lizards on a lava
flow should be easy picking for predators, so how did they survive long enough
to evolve darker coloration?
One
explanation has been that many of an animal's traits are not fixed, but can
change during its lifetime. This "phenotypic plasticity" enables
individual animals to alter their appearance or behavior enough to survive in a
new environment. Eventually, new adaptations promoting survival arise in the
population through genetic changes and natural selection, which acts on the
population over generations. This is known as the "Baldwin effect"
after the psychologist James Mark Baldwin, who presented the idea in a landmark
paper published in 1896.
Scientists
studying the side-blotched lizards on the Pisgah Lava Flow have now documented
this process in meticulous detail. They showed how individual lizards can
change colors in a new environment to become darker on lava; they identified
genes that regulate coloration and that differ between populations on and off
the lava; and they found that the genetic changes in the population adapted to
the lava flow make those lizards darker than others. Their findings, published
September 6 in Current Biology, may be the most detailed example of the
Baldwin effect occurring in a wild population.
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