Species recognition of color and motion signals in Anolis grahami: evidence from responses to lizard robots
Lay summary Anolis lizards use color and motion displays to communicate and to distinguish their own species from others in the same area. We used lizard robots, whose signal characteristics could be varied independently, to test for species recognition in Anolis grahami males. Subjects showed signi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Behavioral ecology 2013-07, Vol.24 (4), p.846-852 |
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creator | Macedonia, J. M. Clark, D. L. Riley, R. G. Kemp, D. J. |
description | Lay summary Anolis lizards use color and motion displays to communicate and to distinguish their own species from others in the same area. We used lizard robots, whose signal characteristics could be varied independently, to test for species recognition in Anolis grahami males. Subjects showed significant decrements in responses to alterations of displays beyond the normal range of variation in a manner that suggests color and motion independently convey information about species identity in these lizards. Lay summary Anolis lizards use color and motion displays to communicate and to distinguish their own species from others in the same area. We used lizard robots, whose signal characteristics could be varied independently, to test for species recognition in Anolis grahami males. Subjects showed significant decrements in responses to alterations of displays beyond the normal range of variation in a manner that suggests color and motion independently convey information about species identity in these lizards. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1093/beheco/art027 |
format | Article |
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M. ; Clark, D. L. ; Riley, R. G. ; Kemp, D. J.</creator><creatorcontrib>Macedonia, J. M. ; Clark, D. L. ; Riley, R. G. ; Kemp, D. J.</creatorcontrib><description>Lay summary Anolis lizards use color and motion displays to communicate and to distinguish their own species from others in the same area. We used lizard robots, whose signal characteristics could be varied independently, to test for species recognition in Anolis grahami males. Subjects showed significant decrements in responses to alterations of displays beyond the normal range of variation in a manner that suggests color and motion independently convey information about species identity in these lizards. Lay summary Anolis lizards use color and motion displays to communicate and to distinguish their own species from others in the same area. We used lizard robots, whose signal characteristics could be varied independently, to test for species recognition in Anolis grahami males. 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We used lizard robots, whose signal characteristics could be varied independently, to test for species recognition in Anolis grahami males. 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Lay summary Anolis lizards use color and motion displays to communicate and to distinguish their own species from others in the same area. We used lizard robots, whose signal characteristics could be varied independently, to test for species recognition in Anolis grahami males. Subjects showed significant decrements in responses to alterations of displays beyond the normal range of variation in a manner that suggests color and motion independently convey information about species identity in these lizards.</abstract><doi>10.1093/beheco/art027</doi><tpages>7</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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source | Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection |
subjects | Anolis Anolis grahami Lacertilia |
title | Species recognition of color and motion signals in Anolis grahami: evidence from responses to lizard robots |
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