“…Alternative behavioral strategies associated with genetically-based color polymorphisms are common in lizards (Sinervo and Lively, 1996; Robson and Miles, 2000; Stuart-Fox et al, 2020; Brock et al, 2022a). Some lizard color morphs with alternative behavioral strategies exhibit different levels of aggression (Bastiaans et al, 2013; Abalos et al, 2016; Yewers et al, 2016; Brock et al, 2022a), and certain color morphs even exhibit morph aggression bias where they adjust their aggressive behaviors depending on the morph with which they are interacting (Sinervo and Lively 1996; Yewers et al, 2016; Scali et al, 2021). Because more aggression in lizards is associated with greater access to resources and greater reproductive success (Herrel et al, 2009), differential morph aggression could play important roles in the evolution and maintenance of color polymorphism (Sinervo and Lively, 1996; Dijkstra et al, 2008; Horton et al, 2012; Yewers et al, 2016; Tinghitella et al, 2018; Scali et al, 2021).…”