Press
Release, James Cook University, Australia, 1/29/13
A
particular species of lizard will aggressively defend their eggs from predators
such as snakes, a James Cook University researcher has found.
Dr
David Pike, lecturer in JCU’s School of
Marine and Tropical Biology, has helped produce a study titled
Predation drives inter-population differences in parental care expression,
which was recently published in the British-based Journal of Animal Ecology.
The
paper was co-authored by Wen-San Huang, a researcher at the National Museum of
Natural Science in Taiwan, Si-Min Lin, an academic at
National Taiwan Normal University, and Sylvain Dubey, a researcher at
University of Lausanne.
Dr
Pike said the research, which was conducted on Orchid Island off Taiwan, found
mother lizards attacked snakes that attempted to raid their nest.
The
species involved were the Asian long-tailed skink (Eutropis longicaudata) and an egg-eating snake (Oligodon formosanus).
“Among
lizards in general, it is quite rare to find a species that stays with the eggs
until they hatch, but the long-tailed skink that we studied is among the few
species that do guard their eggs,” Dr Pike said.
“We
found that the lizards will aggressively defend their eggs from predators -
even snakes.”
Dr
Pike said it might surprise people that lizards could deter a predator as
formidable as a snake.
“Many
snake species readily eat lizards, so with the species we studied, we found we
were either dealing with a very unique lizard or very wimpy snakes,” he said.
“Lizards
can be very aggressive towards snakes, as most mothers can be when provoked,
but this snake species was only interested in eating the lizard eggs, and not
the mother lizard.”
The
physical attributes of the two were also a factor in the phenomenon, he said.
“The
lizards are also pretty big and
the snakes don’t get very big. This allows the lizards to attack snakes without
fear of being eaten,” he said.
“The
lizards understand that the snakes will not eat them, and as a consequence will
fiercely attack snakes that enter the nest."
“By
deterring snakes these mothers ensure that their eggs will hatch.”
Dr
Pike said an interesting part of this unusual lizard-snake relationship was
that the Asian long-tailed skink only protected its eggs on Orchid Island.
“On
nearby islands, this same lizard species lays the eggs and leaves them to face
nature’s fate alone,” he said.
New
research had shed light on why this behaviour had evolved in nature, he said.
“The
reason that mother lizards attack snakes is very clear – mothers who protect
their eggs have more babies than mothers who abandon them. This behaviour
happens only on Orchid Island because there are many more egg-eating snakes
there than most other locations.
“In
fact, when researchers transferred individual lizards from their home island
with very few snakes to Orchid Island, which has lots of snakes, female lizards
changed their behaviour and became good mothers.”
In
contrast, when the nest-defending mothers were moved to islands with few
snakes, these females decided not to guard their eggs, because of the small
chance that they would eaten by snakes.
“So,
it turns out that almost all long-tailed skinks can and will be good mothers by
protecting their eggs from snakes, but only when there are lots of snakes
hanging around,” he said.
“This
shows that motherhood can be dependent on the risks that the offspring face
during their most vulnerable period, the egg stage, and can vary according to
the threat of predation.”
Dr
Pike said he had been involved in the study for two years, but his
collaborators in Taiwan had been studying the Asian long-tailed skink for 15
years.
For
more information, interviews or photos, please contact Dr Pike on 0448 433 785.
JCU
Media contact: Caroline Kaurila (07) 4781 4586 or 0437 028 175
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