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Though it is a widespread adaptation in humans and many other animals, parental care comes in a variety of forms and its subtle physiological costs, benefits, and tradeoffs related to offspring are often unknown. Thus, I studied the hydric, respiratory, thermal, and fitness dynamics of maternal egg-brooding behavior in Children's

Though it is a widespread adaptation in humans and many other animals, parental care comes in a variety of forms and its subtle physiological costs, benefits, and tradeoffs related to offspring are often unknown. Thus, I studied the hydric, respiratory, thermal, and fitness dynamics of maternal egg-brooding behavior in Children's pythons (Antaresia childreni). I demonstrated that tight coiling detrimentally creates a hypoxic developmental environment that is alleviated by periodic postural adjustments. Alternatively, maternal postural adjustments detrimentally elevate rates of egg water loss relative to tight coiling. Despite ventilating postural adjustments, the developmental environment becomes increasingly hypoxic near the end of incubation, which reduces embryonic metabolism. I further demonstrated that brooding-induced hypoxia detrimentally affects offspring size, performance, locomotion, and behavior. Thus, parental care in A. childreni comes at a cost to offspring due to intra-offspring tradeoffs (i.e., those that reflect competing offspring needs, such as water balance and respiration). Next, I showed that, despite being unable to intrinsically produce body heat, A. childreni adjust egg-brooding behavior in response to shifts in nest temperature, which enhances egg temperature (e.g., reduced tight coiling during nest warming facilitated beneficial heat transfer to eggs). Last, I demonstrated that A. childreni adaptively adjust their egg-brooding behaviors due to an interaction between nest temperature and humidity. Specifically, females' behavioral response to nest warming was eliminated during low nest humidity. In combination with other studies, these results show that female pythons sense environmental temperature and humidity and utilize this information at multiple time points (i.e., during gravidity [egg bearing], at oviposition [egg laying], and during egg brooding) to enhance the developmental environment of their offspring. This research demonstrates that maternal behaviors that are simple and subtle, yet easily quantifiable, can balance several critical developmental variables (i.e., thermoregulation, water balance, and respiration).
ContributorsStahlschmidt, Zachary R (Author) / DeNardo, Dale F (Thesis advisor) / Harrison, Jon (Committee member) / McGraw, Kevin (Committee member) / Rutowski, Ronald (Committee member) / Walsberg, Glenn (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2011
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Environmental variation impacts physiological performance in animals. As a result, many animals thermoregulate to buffer unfavorable thermal variation in their environments. Animals are only expected to thermoregulate when the benefits outweigh the costs, although both are difficult to quantify. I examined how habitats and organismal factors shape thermoregulation and physiological

Environmental variation impacts physiological performance in animals. As a result, many animals thermoregulate to buffer unfavorable thermal variation in their environments. Animals are only expected to thermoregulate when the benefits outweigh the costs, although both are difficult to quantify. I examined how habitats and organismal factors shape thermoregulation and physiological performance in lizards. I found that habitat structure shapes opportunities for thermoregulation in two species of Anolis lizards. In dense tropical rainforests where there is low habitat heterogeneity, the range of available microclimates is narrow. Consequently, lizards in the tropics tend to be thermal specialists – performing best over a narrow range of temperatures. This phenotype should lead to decreased performance under climate warming. I then investigated the relationship between body condition, feeding, and thermoregulation in Yarrow’s spiny lizards (Sceloporus jarrovii) using lab- and field-based experiments. In the lab experiment, when lizards were observed in an artificial thermal gradient, neither body condition nor feeding status influenced the mean body temperature. When simulated costs of thermoregulation were higher, all lizards reduced thermoregulation similarly. However, when lizards were observed in an outdoor thermal arena, individuals with lower body condition decreased thermoregulatory performance, resulting in a lower mean body temperature. Animals with poor body condition may face greater risk of predation when thermoregulating. Finally, I conducted a comparative analysis to quantify relationships between the potential for thermoregulatory performance and empirical measures of productivity (i.e., growth rates and reproductive output) in lizard populations. A model that assumes lizards are active whenever preferred temperatures were available overestimated the duration that a lizard could maintain a preferred body temperature. As such, studies equating predicted thermoregulatory performance with fitness in the context of climate change should be interpreted cautiously. Overall, environmental factors and organismal traits shape the thermoregulatory behavior of animals, ultimately affecting their physiological performance and fitness. Biologists should consider these relationships when modeling the impacts of climate change on future performance.
ContributorsNeel, Lauren (Author) / Angilletta, Michael J (Thesis advisor) / Bateman, Heather L (Committee member) / DeNardo, Dale F (Committee member) / Sears, Michael W (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Sexual and social signals have long been thought to play an important role in speciation and diversity; hence, investigations of intraspecific communication may lead to important insights regarding key processes of evolution. Though we have learned much about the control, function, and evolution of animal communication by studying several very

Sexual and social signals have long been thought to play an important role in speciation and diversity; hence, investigations of intraspecific communication may lead to important insights regarding key processes of evolution. Though we have learned much about the control, function, and evolution of animal communication by studying several very common signal types, investigating rare classes of signals may provide new information about how and why animals communicate. My dissertation research focused on rapid physiological color change, a rare signal-type used by relatively few taxa. To answer longstanding questions about this rare class of signals, I employed novel methods to measure rapid color change signals of male veiled chameleons Chamaeleo calyptratus in real-time as seen by the intended conspecific receivers, as well as the associated behaviors of signalers and receivers. In the context of agonistic male-male interactions, I found that the brightness achieved by individual males and the speed of color change were the best predictors of aggression and fighting ability. Conversely, I found that rapid skin darkening serves as a signal of submission for male chameleons, reducing aggression from winners when displayed by losers. Additionally, my research revealed that the timing of maximum skin brightness and speed of brightening were the best predictors of maximum bite force and circulating testosterone levels, respectively. Together, these results indicated that different aspects of color change can communicate information about contest strategy, physiology, and performance ability. Lastly, when I experimentally manipulated the external appearance of chameleons, I found that "dishonestly" signaling individuals (i.e. those whose behavior did not match their manipulated color) received higher aggression from unpainted opponents. The increased aggression received by dishonest signalers suggests that social costs play an important role in maintaining the honesty of rapid color change signals in veiled chameleons. Though the color change abilities of chameleons have interested humans since the time of Aristotle, little was previously known about the signal content of such changes. Documenting the behavioral contexts and information content of these signals has provided an important first step in understanding the current function, underlying control mechanisms, and evolutionary origins of this rare signal type.
ContributorsLigon, Russell (Author) / McGraw, Kevin J. (Committee member) / DeNardo, Dale F (Committee member) / Karsten, Kristopher B (Committee member) / Rutowski, Ronald L (Committee member) / Deviche, Pierre (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Primary production in aquatic ecosystems is often limited by the availability of nitrogen (N) and/or phosphorus (P). Animals can substantially alter the relative availability of these nutrients by storing and recycling them in differential ratios. Variation in these stoichiometric traits, i.e., the elemental phenotype, within a species can link organismal

Primary production in aquatic ecosystems is often limited by the availability of nitrogen (N) and/or phosphorus (P). Animals can substantially alter the relative availability of these nutrients by storing and recycling them in differential ratios. Variation in these stoichiometric traits, i.e., the elemental phenotype, within a species can link organismal evolution to ecosystem function. I examined the drivers of intraspecific variation in the elemental phenotype of aquatic consumers to test for the generality of these effects. Over a thermal gradient in Panamá, I found that average specific growth grate and body P content of the mayfly Thraulodes increased with environmental temperature, but that these patterns were due to site-specific differences rather than the direct effects of warmer temperature. In a meta-analysis of published studies, I found that in fishes intraspecific variation in dietary N:P ratio had a significant effect on excretion N:P ratio, but only when accounting for consumption. I tested for the effects of variation in consumption on excretion N:P ratio among populations of the fish Gambusia marshi in the Cuatro Ciénegas basin in Coahuila, Mexico. G. marshi inhabits warm groundwater-fed springs where it often co-occurs with predatory fishes and cool runoff-dominated wetlands which lack predators. Using stoichiometric models, I generated predictions for how variation in environmental temperature and predation pressure would affect the N:P ratio recycled by fishes. Adult female G. marshi excretion N:P ratio was higher in runoff-dominated sites, which was consistent with predators driving increased consumption rates by G. marshi. This result was supported by a diet ration manipulation experiment in which G. marshi raised on an ad libitum diet excreted N:P at a lower ratio than fish raised on a restricted diet ration. To further support the impacts of predation on phenotypic diversification in G. marshi, I examined how body morphology varied among habitats and among closely related species. Both among and within species, predation had stronger effects on morphology than the physical environment. Overall, these results suggest that predation, not temperature, has strong effects on these phenotypic traits of aquatic consumers which can alter their role in ecosystem nutrient cycling through variation in consumption rates.
ContributorsMoody, Eric Kellan (Author) / Elser, James J (Thesis advisor) / Sabo, John L (Thesis advisor) / Angilletta, Michael J (Committee member) / Capps, Krista A (Committee member) / Collins, James P. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
The global spread of the Aedes aegypti mosquito, a competent disease vector, is occurring at an alarming pace. These invasive mosquitos have spread to latitudes once thought inaccessible due to thermal and hydric limitations, including Maricopa County, AZ, where strong increases in population size has occurred over the last decade.

The global spread of the Aedes aegypti mosquito, a competent disease vector, is occurring at an alarming pace. These invasive mosquitos have spread to latitudes once thought inaccessible due to thermal and hydric limitations, including Maricopa County, AZ, where strong increases in population size has occurred over the last decade. The Aedes aegypti in Maricopa County follow a highly seasonal pattern with populations all but disappearing each winter, only to return and build exponentially though the summer and fall. Maricopa County’s winters are relatively mild, which raises the question of whether further global climate change will warm conditions enough to create a broadened seasonal breeding period, or worse yet, year-round mosquito activity within desert southwest cities. This dissertation focuses on exploring the possible seasonal constraints on the egg, larva, and adult life stages of the Aedes aegypti mosquito within a suburban desert ecosystem. I explored whether climatic warming would raise temperatures enough to enable survival and development of these animals during the winter offseason. I determined that larval growth and adult flight are constrained by ambient winter temperatures in Maricopa County, explaining the currently observed winter crash in populations. However, warming by only a few degrees Centigrade could enable successful larval growth and development, as well as adult flight, even during the coldest desert months. I found that load and temperature interact to determine the flight cost of mosquitos, which can very up to six-fold, with higher temperatures likely increasing their flight performance but decreasing their distance capacities and increasing their need for fuel. Aedes aegypti likely primarily overwinters as eggs. However, I showed that the vast majority of Aedes aegypti eggs die overwinter in Maricopa County. By manipulating humidity in eggs exposed to ambient air temperatures, I showed that desiccation, not cold temperatures, is the limiting factor in long-term survival of Aedes aegypti eggs. Together, my data suggests that humid, urban microhabitats may be essential for enabling overwinter egg survival in Maricopa County, providing a potential important pathway toward control of this disease vector.
ContributorsFox, Trevor (Author) / Harrison, Jon F (Thesis advisor) / Angilletta, Michael J (Committee member) / Benoit, Joshua B (Committee member) / Smith, Kirk (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Though the connection between terrestrial riparian consumers and the adjacent aquatic food web has been well-studied in a variety of systems, gaps with respect to several habitats remain. The Colorado River Basin represents many of these untested habitat characteristics: it contains large, controlled rivers in an arid environment that are

Though the connection between terrestrial riparian consumers and the adjacent aquatic food web has been well-studied in a variety of systems, gaps with respect to several habitats remain. The Colorado River Basin represents many of these untested habitat characteristics: it contains large, controlled rivers in an arid environment that are often canyon-bound. These characteristics, however, are not unique to the Colorado River Basin. Dams and arid lands are becoming increasingly common around the world, stressing the importance of understanding the function of riparian areas within the Colorado River Basin and basins like it. Stable isotopes, including the more recent application of deuterium, can be used to elucidate trophic linkages between rivers and their riparia. Though dams may harm aquatic insect populations, it is possible that they also make aquatic insects a stable, constant food source to the riparian biological community. This dissertation demonstrates that aquatic emergent insects are a reliable, and therefore important, food source for arid land riparian consumers along regulated rivers. However, the importance of aquatic emergent insects to riparian consumers may vary across sites, even within the same river basin. To explore this variation, the diet of a common riparian lizard species Urosaurus ornatus (Ornate Tree Lizard) can be used as an indicator of cross-ecosystem connectivity. This dissertation demonstrates linkages between two differing river segments and U. ornatus, showcasing its ability as an indicator of connectivity across a diversity of systems. Within the Colorado River Basin, the Grand Canyon provides an opportunity to study a variety of riparian consumers across a gradient of habitat parameters and dam effects. This dissertation demonstrates the manifold connections between large, regulated rivers and arid riparian consumers, ranging from lizards, to bats, to, for the first time, mice. Monsoons have differing effects on river-riparian communities in this basin, potentially related to intact tributary confluences. Lastly, this dissertation demonstrates that hydropeaking reduces river-riparia connectivity by reducing aquatic insect emergence. This dissertation seeks to improve understanding of the linkages between river and their riparia to aid in the management of arid riparian areas affected by dams worldwide.
ContributorsLupoli, Christina Alexandra (Author) / Sabo, John L (Thesis advisor) / DeNardo, Dale F (Committee member) / Kennedy, Theodore A (Committee member) / Muehlbauer, Jeffrey D (Committee member) / Yackulic, Charles B (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021