Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 10 Aug 2022

Inferring Social Interactions Over a Lifespan from Space-Use Patterns in a Tropical Agamid

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Page Range: 164 – 171
DOI: 10.1670/20-068
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ABSTRACT

Establishing the social system of a population is key to studying the evolution of behaviors. However, observations of social interactions needed to infer social systems are difficult to obtain for many species. An alternative way of understanding social systems is by studying the space-use pattern of individuals. Along with ecological factors, space use is largely governed by interactions among individuals: typically, competing individuals avoid each other, and individuals benefitting from each other share space. We investigated the social system, specifically the mating system, and the nature of intrasexual interactions between adults, by quantifying space-use patterns of individuals over their adult lifespan in the tropical Psammophilus dorsalis lizard. Males had substantially larger home ranges than females during the mating season, but not during the nonmating season. Female home ranges were small, and showed minimal overlap with other females throughout their lifespan, suggesting consistent intrasexual competition among females. In contrast, males showed minimal overlap with other males in the nonmating season but increased overlap in the mating season, suggesting that males resolve intrasexual competition through other means, like contests, during the mating season. Patterns of overlap between male and female home ranges in the mating season indicated a socially polygynous mating system. Our study provides an initial understanding of home-range patterns and associated inferences of within- and between-sex interactions across the lifespan of a tropical lizard, Psammophilus dorsalis. It highlights the insights into the social structure of a population gained from dispersion patterns of individuals.

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Copyright: Copyright 2022 Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles 2022
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Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.

Home ranges (80% minimum convex polygon) of adult males (grey polygons) and females (black polygons) in early-mating season (May 2016), peak mating season (July 2016), late-mating season (October 2016) and nonmating season (November 2016), on a sheet rock. One month is chosen to represent a season but the pattern is very similar in other months for a given season.


Fig. 2.
Fig. 2.

Male home ranges show an increase in the peak and tail mating seasons. Female home ranges are smaller and do not change much with season. The error bars represent 95% bootstrapped CI. The numbers above bars represent sample size (number of monthly home ranges).


Fig. 3.
Fig. 3.

Change in home-range sizes of males (A) and females (B) across their adult lifetime. Each line represents one individual. Note the difference in scale in figures (A) and (B). All adult individuals present at the study site during the study period for more than 1 mo have been included in the above figure.


Fig. 4.
Fig. 4.

Intrasexual (A) and intersexual (B) home-range-size overlap by males and females across seasons. The error bars represent 95% bootstrapped confidence intervals and sample sizes are found above bars.


Contributor Notes

Corresponding author. E-mail: devicaranade@gmail.com
Accepted: 25 Aug 2021
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