Date: April 8, 2019
Source: University of Plymouth
A remote
island in the Caribbean could offer clues as to how invasive species are able
to colonise new territories and then thrive in them, a new study suggests.
Scientists
from the University of Plymouth have recently completed extensive research into
a lizard population on the Cayman Islands.
Up until
the mid-1980s, there had never been a recorded sighting of the Maynard's Anole
(Anolis maynardi) on Cayman Brac island despite it being less than 10km from
its native territory, Little Cayman.
However,
since the species was first discovered on Cayman Brac in 1987 -- in what is
thought to have been a human-assisted colonisation -- its population has spread
right across the 39km² island.
For this
study, recent graduate Vaughn Bodden and Lecturer in Conservation Biology Dr
Robert Puschendorf conducted a detailed analysis of the invasive species.
They
wanted to assess whether individuals at the forefront of the invasion have developed
distinct biological traits that are advantageous for dispersal, and compared
their findings to animals in the area of first introduction and the native
population on Little Cayman.
They
discovered the Cayman Brac population has diverged morphologically from the
native population, and within the invasive range there was trend of increasing
forelimb length from the core to range edge areas. This ran contrary to the
expected findings that longer hindlimbs would be the trait selected as a
dispersal-related phenotype.
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