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Parental behavior drives large bite force in an insular skink population
Author(s) -
Tseng H.Y.,
Liao C.P.,
Hsu J.Y.,
Wang L.Y.,
Huang W.S.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of zoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.915
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1469-7998
pISSN - 0952-8369
DOI - 10.1111/jzo.12638
Subject(s) - skink , biology , bite force quotient , predation , sexual selection , mating , sexual conflict , population , ecology , zoology , courtship , competition (biology) , lizard , demography , sociology
Different environments may drive the evolution of morphological traits due to selection on organismal performance. In lizards, bite force plays an important role both for inter‐ and intra‐specific interactions, such as prey preference, resource competition, predatory defense, and courtship behavior. Individuals with large bite force may benefit from a high reproductive success through territorial defense or predatory deterrence. Under extremely high predation risk from the oophagic kukri snake ( Oligodon formosanus ), long‐tailed skinks ( Eutropis longicaudata ) on Orchid Island exhibit an exclusive post‐ovipositional parental care, not found in any other populations. In this study, we tested the assumption that Orchid Island skinks exhibit higher bite force than two other populations without egg‐guarding behavior. We investigated the three hypotheses that best explain this adaptation: (1) Orchid Island skinks have different parental care than Green Island and Taiwan skinks, which may drive larger bite force; (2) in the three populations, male–male competition and mating bites enhance bite force, leading males to present higher bite force than females; (3) head traits are indicators of bite force. Our results show for the first time that Orchid Island skinks exhibit larger bite force than the other populations do, which may be shaped by a higher egg‐predation pressure and the consequent parental behavior. Males exhibit stronger bite force likely due to a stronger sexual selection. Bite force of long‐tailed skink is positively correlated with larger body weight and head length, and the larger head can further enhance bite force for males in sexual selection.

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