Juvenile growth rates are thought to be restricted by available food resources. In animals that grow throughout the year, such as tropical lizards, growth is therefore predicted to be faster during the rainy season. We test this prediction using a population of Anolis nebulosus by describing the growth trajectories of both sexes using nonlinear regression models, and we then correlate the growth rates of individuals with food available in the environment, precipitation and temperature. The Von Bertalanffy model fit the growth rates of the females better, while the logistic-by-length model fit the males better. According to both models, the males grew faster than females, reaching slightly smaller sizes at adulthood. Males reached sexual mat...
Thermal activity constraints play a major role in many aspects of ectotherm ecology, including vulne...
Animals communicate using a variety of signals that differ dramatically among and within species. Th...
My dissertation examined the relative importance of proximate ecological versus ultimate evolutionar...
Juvenile growth rates are thought to be restricted by available food resources. In animals that grow...
Many tropical ectotherms are considered vulnerable to anthropogenic climate change because they have...
The body growth rate in small reptiles is modulated by per-capita food resources and r...
The body growth rate in small reptiles is modulated by per-capita food resources and recent evidence...
While developmental plasticity has been shown to contribute to sexual size dimorphism (SSD) in labor...
Reproductive phenology often varies geographically within species, driven by environmental gradients...
Tradeoffs between reproduction and survival are central to life-history theory and are expected to s...
We collected and individually marked 210 male and 143 female Anolis sagrei from a small Betelnut Pal...
Growth rates of ectotherms are frequently affected by environmental conditions, such as temperature,...
Temperature influences the activity seasons, reproductive phenology, survival rates, and growth rate...
Ecological specialization is common across all levels of biological organization, raising the questi...
Bergmann's rule—the tendency for body size to increase in colder environments—remains controversial ...
Thermal activity constraints play a major role in many aspects of ectotherm ecology, including vulne...
Animals communicate using a variety of signals that differ dramatically among and within species. Th...
My dissertation examined the relative importance of proximate ecological versus ultimate evolutionar...
Juvenile growth rates are thought to be restricted by available food resources. In animals that grow...
Many tropical ectotherms are considered vulnerable to anthropogenic climate change because they have...
The body growth rate in small reptiles is modulated by per-capita food resources and r...
The body growth rate in small reptiles is modulated by per-capita food resources and recent evidence...
While developmental plasticity has been shown to contribute to sexual size dimorphism (SSD) in labor...
Reproductive phenology often varies geographically within species, driven by environmental gradients...
Tradeoffs between reproduction and survival are central to life-history theory and are expected to s...
We collected and individually marked 210 male and 143 female Anolis sagrei from a small Betelnut Pal...
Growth rates of ectotherms are frequently affected by environmental conditions, such as temperature,...
Temperature influences the activity seasons, reproductive phenology, survival rates, and growth rate...
Ecological specialization is common across all levels of biological organization, raising the questi...
Bergmann's rule—the tendency for body size to increase in colder environments—remains controversial ...
Thermal activity constraints play a major role in many aspects of ectotherm ecology, including vulne...
Animals communicate using a variety of signals that differ dramatically among and within species. Th...
My dissertation examined the relative importance of proximate ecological versus ultimate evolutionar...