Intraspecific chemical recognition in the lizard Liolaemus tenuis
Artículo
Open/ Download
Publication date
1999Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Labra, Antonieta
Cómo citar
Intraspecific chemical recognition in the lizard Liolaemus tenuis
Author
Abstract
Experimental tests were conducted to determine whether females and males of the tree-dwelling lizard Liolaemus tenuis (Tropiduridae) show intraspecific chemical recognition during breeding and postreproductive seasons. Animals were individually maintained in plastic enclosures for one week. Thereafter, the number of tongue-flicks that a lizard performed in the enclosure of a male, a female, its own home enclosure, and a control (unused) enclosure were recorded. In both seasons, males and females made fewer tongue-flicks in their home enclosures than in any other one, indicating a recognition of a familiar place, probably a chemical self-recognition. Conspecific chemical recognition was season dependent. During the post- reproductive season, lizards tongue-flicked at similar rates in conspecific and control enclosures, while during the breeding season enclosures of females elicited more tongue-flicks by both sexes, and the overall tongue- flick rates were higher than in the postreproduc
Indexation
Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/156138
DOI: 10.1023/A:1020925631314
ISSN: 00980331
Quote Item
Journal of Chemical Ecology, Volumen 25, Issue 8, 2018, Pages 1799-1811
Collections