The Nature
Conservancy, February 27, 2014
Several years ago, Nature Conservancy vertebrate
zoologist Mike Duran was concerned. In his seven years of conservation work,
he’d never once seen a spot-tailed earless lizard (Holbrookia lacerata). The
northern subspecies, or H.l. lacerata, historically occurs above the Balcones
Escarpment, the fault line that separates the Edwards Plateau from the Tamaulipan Thornscrub ecoregion of southern
Texas. The southern subspecies, or H.l. subcaudalis, has dwelled traditionally
below that fault line. But in modern times, finding either type of the
lizard—which measures four-and-a-half to six inches long and has no external
ear openings—has proven difficult, if not impossible.
“Right now, we just don’t know where the spot-tailed
earless lizard still occurs and where it has probably been extirpated,” or
locally extinct, Duran said in 2009. “That’s what we have to start with.
It all starts with gathering more data.”
To gather that data, Duran teamed up with Dr. Ralph
Axtell of Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, the foremost expert on
spot-tailed earless lizards. Together they embarked on four years
of field surveys and solicited a lot of help from the public along the way,
encouraging amateur herpetologists and outdoor enthusiasts to report suspected sightings. Axtell and Duran—with the help of
Dr. Toby Hibbitts of Texas A&M University, Dr. Travis LaDuc from University
of Texas at Austin, Dr. Michael Forstner of Texas State University and the late
Dr. Andy Price, herpetologist for the Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department—ultimately confirmed populations of the northern subspecies in 12
Texas counties. But, after visiting every known historical locality for the
southern subspecies, they couldn’t find a single subcaudalis specimen.
“At the time, I was disheartened that we didn’t
observe any of the southern subspecies, but I remained optimistic that the
lizard still occurred in scattered patches of suitable habitat in southern Texas ,” Duran said.
Then a single act of citizen science turned everything
upside down. Greg Worley, a mechanic at Laughlin Air Force Base near Del Rio , Texas , snapped a
photo of a lizard he couldn’t identify and sent it to the Texas Parks
and Wildlife Department. TPWD’s horned lizard specialist, Lee Ann Linum,
recognized it as a spot-tailed earless lizard and forwarded the image to Duran,
who was “excited and relieved to see evidence that the lizard still occurs in
southern Texas .”
In March, he made the trip to Laughlin, where he met
up with Danny Yandell, Laughlin’s natural resource specialist. “[We] had not
driven 200 meters into the suspected habitat when we observed not one, but six
of the lizards scurrying about,” Duran said. As the lizards scattered, he saw
several dive into ground squirrel burrows, an action that ultimately “deserves
more study.” Before now, there had never been a single recorded observation of
spot-tailed earless lizards using mammal burrows for shelter. “Very little is
known about the ecology of this species,” Duran added.
For years, herpetologists have believed the subcaudalis
was extirpated from its historical habitat in Bee, Refugio, San Patricio, Nueces , Kleberg, Karnes, Live Oak and Atascosa counties.
The reasons varied from habitat loss, pesticide use and red fire ants to the
invasion of non-native grasses. The landscape at Laughlin however, while not
pristine, harkens back to what southern Texas
grasslands once were.
“The habitat at Laughlin has been accidentally
preserved—they don’t graze livestock or plant row crops and they mow the area
frequently to discourage birds, which can’t coexist with jet turbines too
well,” Duran said.
Duran and Yandell captured one male lizard in March,
the first time a specimen of subcaudalis has been collected in 20 years. On two
subsequent visits they collected two more lizards; soon after, Duran donated
all three to the Fort Worth Zoo, which has been preparing a captive breeding
program for spot-tailed earless lizards (though staffers never expected to
acquire this subspecies).
This historic find will go down in the record
books as the first recorded sighting of the subcaudalis subspecies in
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