Common side-blotched lizard

common side-blotched lizard
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Lacertilia
Infraorder: Iguania
Family: Phrynosomatidae
Genus: Uta
Species: U. stansburiana
Binomial name
Uta stansburiana
Baird & Girard, 1852
Subspecies
  • U. s. stansburiana
    northern side-blotched lizard
  • U. s. nevadensis
    Nevada side-blotched lizard
  • U. s. uniformis
    plateau side-blotched lizard
  • U. s. elegans
    western side-blotched lizard
  • U. s. stellata
    San Benito side-blotched lizard
  • U. s. concinna
    Cedros side-blotched lizard
  • U. s. martinensis
    San Martin side-blotched lizard (disputed)
  • U. s. taylori
    Taylor's side-blotched lizard (disputed)
Synonyms

Uta concinna
Uta elegans
Uta graciosa
Uta levis
Uta martinensis
Uta mearnsi
Uta microscutata
Uta stansburiana hesperis
Uta stellata
Uta thalassina
Uta wrighti

The common side-blotched lizard (Uta stansburiana) is a species of side-blotched lizard common on the Pacific coast of North America, from Washington to western Texas and NW Mexico. It has a peculiar evolutionary strategy following the pattern of the game of Rock, Paper, Scissors, with three types of males existing, each of which applies a different technique to acquire mates (Sinervo & Lively, 1996; Sinervo, 2001; Alonzo & Sinervo, 2001; Sinervo & Clobert, 2001; Sinervo & Zamudio, 2001).

The specific epithet, stansburiana, is in honor of Captain Howard Stansbury of the United States Corps of Topographical Engineers, who collected the first specimens while leading the 1849-1851 expedition to explore and survey the Great Salt Lake of Utah.[1]

Contents

Systematics

The systematics and taxonomy of these widespread and variable lizards is much disputed (Grismer, 1994; Upton & Murphy, 1997). Countless forms and morphs have been described as subspecies or even distinct species (e.g. Schmidt, 1921).

Mating strategy

Biologist Barry Sinervo from the University of California, Santa Cruz has discovered a rock-paper-scissors strategy in the mating behaviour of the side-blotched lizard species Uta stansburiana. Males have either orange, blue or yellow throats and each type follows a fixed, heritable mating strategy:[2]

This can be summarized as "orange beats blue, blue beats yellow, and yellow beats orange", which is similar to the rules of rock-paper-scissors.

The proportion of each male type in a population is similar in the long run, but fluctuates widely in the short term. For periods of 4–5 years, one strategy predominates, after which it declines in frequency as the strategy that manages to exploit its weakness increases. This corresponds to the stable pattern of the game in the replicator dynamics where the dynamical system follows closed orbits around the mixed strategy Nash equilibrium (Sinervo & Lively, 1996; Sinervo, 2001; Alonzo & Sinervo, 2001; Sinervo & Clobert, 2003; Sinervo & Zamudio, 2001).

References

  1. ^ Moll, Edward. 2005. Uta stansburiana, Baird and Girard, 1852 - Common Side-blotched Lizard. Sonoran Herpetologist.
  2. ^ Sinervo, Barry (2001-02-20). "The rock-paper-scissors game and the evolution of alternative male strategies". http://bio.research.ucsc.edu/~barrylab/lizardland/male_lizards.overview.html. Retrieved 2006-08-20. 

External links

Media related to Uta stansburiana at Wikimedia Commons