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Original Articles

Behavioral compensation buffers body temperatures of two Liolaemus lizards under contrasting environments from the temperate Pampas: a Bogert effect?

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Pages 297-318 | Received 27 May 2017, Accepted 14 Sep 2017, Published online: 08 Nov 2017
 

Abstract

Postural adjustments and microhabitat selection are two behavioral mechanisms that lizards extensively use to regulate their body temperatures. The Bogert effect occurs when behavioral thermoregulation buffers potential changes in body temperatures of congeneric organisms due to environmental variation, in turn precluding physiological evolution. We compared field body temperatures (Tb) and behavioral thermoregulation traits between two Liolaemus lizards: the saxicolous Liolaemus tandiliensis and the arenicolous Liolaemus wiegmannii. These species are spatially segregated in two thermally contrasting environments from the SE of the temperate Pampas of Argentina. During summer, the mean operative temperature (Te) of the coastal sand dunes occupied by L. wiegmannii was 9 ºC higher than that of the Tandilia mountains inhabited by L. tandiliensis. Despite the contrasting thermal conditions of both habitats, the mean Tb of L. tandiliensis (34.72 °C) was similar to that of L. wiegmannii (35.01 °C). The behavioral thermoregulation mechanisms varied considerably between both species. Liolaemus tandiliensis combined static body posture with displacements towards sunlit areas. In contrast, L. wiegmannii combined elevated and prostrated body postures with movements towards full and filtered sun patches. Environmental gradients offer diverse challenges impelling lizards to find different behavioral thermoregulation adaptations in order to partially cope with environmental constraints. This occurs in many species of Liolaemus that are thermoregulatory efficient despite of the climatic adversities. In this study, two species of Liolaemus used different postural and microhabitat path-selection strategies according to climate, allowing them to buffer changes in Tb, thus suggesting that the Bogert effect may be occurring in these two species.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Camila Rocca for her assistance during the fieldwork. The authors adhered to guidelines for the use of animals in research and to the legal requirements of Buenos Aires province, Argentina (CICUAL RD 255; Scientific Purposes Permit 22230-21/2006-0).

DISCLOSURE STATEMENT

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

Funding for the study was provided by Comisión Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET) and Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata [UNMdP; 15E/695; EXA 745/15].

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