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Figure 2. (a) Displays performed by male and female (fifth mating). (b) Beginning of chasing. Female approaches and runs past the male in the opposite direction to that in which he was facing. (c) Male bite and proboscis lifting. (d) Male stops biting and lower the rostral appendage after copulation begins. (e) Biting attempt from MIN5 (left) to MIN10 (right). (f) Proboscis used in physical contact, MIN5 (left), MIN10 (right). (g) Jaw locking between MIN27 (left) and MIN29 (right). (h) Body flattening against the branch and colour changing of MIN21 during approach and displays of MIN20. Photo credits: Diego Quirola.
Published as part of Quirola, Diego R., Mármol, Andrés, Torres-Carvajal, Omar, Narváez, Andrea E., Ayala-Varela, Fernando & Moore, Ignacio T., 2017, Use of a rostral appendage during social interactions in the Ecuadorian Anolis proboscis, pp. 1625-1638 in Journal of Natural History 51 (27-28) on page 1631, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2017.1332790, http://zenodo.org/record/5182197
Biodiversity, Taxonomy
Biodiversity, Taxonomy
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