Physiological Consequences of Food Limitation for a Color Polymorphic Lizard: Are Coping Responses Morph-Specific?
Color polymorphism in animals often reflects discrete intraspecific variation in suites of traits linked with survival and reproductive success, as well as an ability to exploit diverse habitat types. Given those considerations, it has been hypothesized that color polymorphic species may be better able to withstand broad-scale environmental disturbances compared to monomorphic taxa. An assumption underlying this hypothesis is that morphs differ in their responses to the consequences of a disturbance. We test whether two color morphs of the Ornate Tree Lizard (
Urosaurus ornatus
) differ in their physiological responses to a likely outcome of a habitat disturbance, food limitation. We subjected blue and yellow morph
U. ornatus
to one of two feeding treatments (control [fed every other day] and food-limited [fed every five days]) and monitored their changes in body mass and stamina capacity for the next four weeks. We found that in general, food-limited males lost mass and had reduced stamina over time. Although yellow males had consistently greater stamina than blue males, the temporal patterns of change in stamina, as well as body mass, were not morph-specific. Our findings suggest that at least one aspect of a species' coping tactics, in terms of energy-allocation decisions, is similar for these two
U. ornatus
morphs. Despite this overlap, the consistently lower stamina capacity of blue males in this study, coupled with data from ongoing field work in our lab, suggest that this morph may nonetheless suffer greater long-term fitness costs than yellow males in disturbed environments.

Relationship between body size (snout–vent length, in mm) and mass loss (initial mass–final mass) of male tree lizards (Urosaurus ornatus, n = 32) during our food-limitation experiment. Trend line added for illustrative purposes.

Change in the stamina (time until exhaustion, sec) over time of male tree lizards (Urosaurus ornatus) during our food-limitation experiment. (A) Males grouped by treatment only: control (fed every other day, black line and points, n = 16) and food-limited (fed every five days, gray line and points, n = 16). (B) Males grouped by color morph (line style, solid or broken for yellow and blue males, respectively) and treatment (line color, black or gray for control or food-limited, respectively). We estimated each lizard's stamina capacity at the start, midpoint, and end of the four-week experiment (see Methods for details). Points are means and whiskers are ±1 SE.
Contributor Notes
Associate Editor: C. Bevier.