Penn State
News, University Park, Pa. by Gail McCormick, 4/17/19
Physical
traits and behaviors that make a lizard sexy — features used to attract
potential mates and fend off competitors — may be important enough that they do
not change in the face of stress. A new study by researchers at Penn State
reveals that the blue and black badges on the throats and abdomens of male
fence lizards — and signaling behaviors used to show them off — are not
affected by low levels of stress-associated hormones, unlike many other traits.
A paper describing
the results appears in the journal Scientific Reports.
The blue and
black badges on a male lizard’s chin and abdomen help attract potential mates
and fend off competitors. A new study by researchers at Penn State reveals that
low levels of stress-associated hormones do not affect badge color or behaviors
used to show off badges, suggesting that these traits are resilient to stress.
IMAGE: TRACY LANGKILDE, PENN STATE
“Animals in
the wild experience stress every day when they flee from predators, fight with
others over food, or face extreme weather,” said Kirsty MacLeod, a
postdoctoral
scholar at Penn State at the time of the research and lead author of the paper.
“But they are facing increasing amounts of stress due to increased interactions
with people, a changing climate, and other anthropogenic changes. Because of
this, it is rapidly becoming more important to understand the myriad effects of
stress on population health.”
The
researchers studied the effects of stress on “secondary sexual traits,” which,
like a deer’s antlers or a bird’s brilliant colors, are important in attracting
mates or warding off potential rivals, and ultimately contribute to an animal’s
ability to reproduce. Specifically, they studied the blue and black badges that
appear on the throats and abdomens of male eastern fence lizards.
“Secondary
sexual traits are the billboard ads animals use to advertise their condition,”
said MacLeod. “Being more colorful or having bigger ornaments — like antlers —
than your neighbor, could mean the difference between mating and passing on
your genes, or not mating at all. They also help in maintaining a great
territory that can provide resources for your offspring and preventing constant
attack by rival males. If stress affects these secondary sexual traits, it
could affect which individuals are successful in mating or holding territories,
which could in turn affect the evolution and persistence of these populations —
even though these traits are often not thought of as being central to
population health.”
The research
team found that the color of a lizard’s badges is not related to the normal
circulating levels of the stress hormone corticosterone in their blood.
Additionally, artificially elevating levels of corticosterone, replicating the
elevation that occurs when a lizard encounters a stressor, like a predator,
repeatedly over the course of a few weeks did not affect badge color.
In addition
to investigating the physical trait of badge color, the research team also
looked at how the trait is displayed through behaviors. Much like a male
peacock might raise its colorful tail, fence lizards perform push-ups and bob
their heads to show off their badges, warding off other males or attracting
potential mates.
“If stress
did not affect color but did affect the behavior, for example if lizards
stopped doing pushups, then it wouldn't matter if their color was the same
because it wouldn't be seen,” said MacLeod. “It would be like having a big
flashy billboard lying on the ground.”
The team
found that elevating stress hormones did not affect signaling behaviors,
including the number of pushups or head bobs that the lizards performed.
“We know
that elevating stress hormones can have important effects in this lizard species,
including on immune function and behaviors that allow them to deal with
predators, so these results are particularly interesting,” said Tracy
Langkilde, professor and head of biology at Penn State and senior author of the
paper. “It may be that low-level stress is not enough to impact these traits.
Or that sexual signaling — to find better mates and maintain better territories
— is so important that, when lizards experience stress, more resources are
allocated to maintain them.”
Next, the
researchers plan to investigate whether maintaining these signaling traits
under stress has an increased physiological cost on other aspects of lizard
health and survival.
The
researchers also emphasize that sharing negative results like these, which show
that a factor of interest does not have an effect, is valuable, as these
results provide meaningful information and can challenge the status quo.
“It’s always
cool to show that something you expected to have an impact on animals, like
stress, does so, but it's equally important to show where there is no impact,”
said MacLeod. “If we only reported results that show stress having an impact,
we might over-estimate the effects of stress. Our results suggest that animals
are resilient to stress where it matters: in the context of sexual signaling,
which is likely to be critical in determining their ability to successfully
reproduce.”
In addition
to MacLeod and Langkilde, the research team also includes Gail McCormick, a
graduate student at Penn State at the time of the research. MacLeod is
currently a Marie Skłodowska Curie Action (MSCA) Research Fellow at Lund
University, Sweden. This research was funded in part by the National Science
Foundation and the Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists.
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