The
brown anole has overrun Florida. Sometimes called Cuban anoles, they
have become the most abundant vertebrate on Florida land.
Has Cuba impacted our environment? Here are three species that have made the leap.
BROWN ANOLES
This little lizard has an aggressive streak.
Swiftly,
quietly, the brown anole has overrun Florida. Sometimes called the
Cuban anoles, they have become the most abundant vertebrate on Florida
land, with recorded populations exceeding 10,000 per hectare.
But
really, this is a tale of two lizards. When the brown anole first
started to colonize the Florida mainland in the 1940s, it came across
another lizard, small and slender just like itself.
The
bright green Carolina anole had been the only anole lizard native to
Florida, and it had prospered across the Southeast United States. But,
suddenly, it found itself in a turf battle with the invading brown
anole.
They
were both color-changing lizards, between 5 to 8 inches in length,
competing for the same territory and the same food. But the brown anole
had the upper hand. Back in Cuba, it shared an island with over 60 other
anole lizards. It had to bulk up to face its rivals.
“In
some sense, it’s better evolved, better adapted to competing with other
anoles, so when it gets to Florida, it’s more aggressive and a little
bit heavier,” said Yoel Stuart, a post-doctoral researcher in
integrative biology at the University of Texas at Austin.
He
told the Times-Union that he has heard many native-born Floridians
lament the disappearance of the green Carolina anole in recent years, as
the brown ones took over.
But all is not lost for the Carolina anole.
Stuart
led a study of Carolina and Cuban anoles, and he found that the little
green lizards were evolving rapidly to face down the invading force.
For
their study, Stuart and his colleagues “battled weather and salt water
and malfunctioning motors and leaky boats,” to reach isolated islands on
Florida’s Atlantic coast.
They
arrived armed with what Stuart describes as “a little extendable
fishing pole with a little lasso at the end of it.” And when they
spotted a lizard, they tried to slip the lasso around its neck, to
collect measurements.
The
Cuban anoles had, as expected, settled all but five of the 30 islands
they visited. But how quickly the Carolina anoles were reacting
surprised the researchers. They had fled to the canopy where, in the
course of just 15 years, they had sprouted vastly bigger feet with
stickier scales.
“If
human height were evolving as fast as these lizards’ toes, the height
of an average American man would increase from about 5-foot-9 inches
today to about 6-foot-4 inches within 20 generations,” Stuart said in a
news release. That would make the average American the same size as a
NBA shooting guard.
That rapid evolution will likely allow the Carolina anole to coexist with the brown anole.
“It’s
not going to go anywhere,” Stuart said. “It’s just going to be a little
less abundant, a little bit higher up in the trees.”
But
Stuart sees the brown anole’s rampant success as a warning, especially
as other exotic lizards try to make Florida their home. He points out
that South Florida is under siege by tegu and monitor lizards.
“People
should realize if they buy a pet and can’t keep it, they shouldn’t just
release it,” he said. “You never know which one is going to take off
and start breeding in the wild.”
CUBAN BROWN SNAIL
The Cuban brown snail may have crawled into Florida with the help of one man, Charles Torrey Simpson.
Simpson
was a naturalist by trade, at a time when Florida was still largely
frontier. When Simpson arrived in South Florida during the late 1800s,
settlements like Miami were sparsely populated, and the wilderness
teemed with unknown species.
Simpson
cataloged many of Florida’s flora and fauna, and his work earned him
nicknames like the “Sage of Biscayne Bay” and “the John Muir of the
Everglades.” But his specialty was shells. He had a reputation for being
able to identify 10,000 different shells by sight, by their Latin names
no less.
During
a trip to Cuba, Simpson picked up some snail specimens to bring home to
Little River, Fla. There he liberated them among Florida’s tropical
hammocks.
“I
have introduced a number of other snails from Cuba and Bimini,” Simpson
wrote to a colleague, G.H. Clapp, in 1918. “I simply introduced the
things for ‘company’ and not for any ‘scientific results.’ ”
Nearly
a century later, professor John Capinera follows in Simpson’s
footsteps, studying Florida’s snails and slugs at the University of
Florida. It’s a field that “had gone neglected for a long time,”
Capinera said. The Cuban brown snail was once “virtually unstudied.”
Being
one of the few people to conduct research on the snails, Capinera finds
himself on the phone nearly every day with worried gardeners. On the
day Capinera spoke to the Times-Union, he had already fielded two phone
calls.
These
snails grow to be about an inch wide, with a round, spiraling shell
atop their backs. They are common in South Florida but, according to
Capinera, they have “spread up the coast.” He speculates climate change
might have allowed them to inch northward, or perhaps it was simply a
matter of time.
Capinera
considers the Cuban brown snail to be simply a “nuisance,” since it
preys on the ornamental plants that gardeners and nurseries keep.
“The impact is mostly cosmetic. It doesn’t threaten the food supply,” he said.
Rather
than poisoning the snails, Capinera recommends removing them by hand
when possible. The damage done by misapplying pesticides far outweighs
the snail’s ravaging appetites, he explained.
“The
more poisons we put in the environment, the more difficult it is for us
to preserve the nature of our environment and to protect the organisms
that are at risk,” he said.
CUBAN TREE FROG
Elizabeth Roznik’s truck was rumbling north to Gainesville, when she noticed something startling in her rearview mirror.
Plastered
on the glass between the truck’s cab and its covered bed was a huge
Cuban tree frog, identifiable by its bulging eyes and fat toe pads. The
species is invasive to Florida, where it has crept farther and farther
up the peninsula, all the way to Jacksonville.
Roznik,
who has researched the Cuban tree frog in her studies of amphibians,
had heard about the species hopping aboard cars and traveling northward.
“I was like, case in point. That’s exactly what happens,” she said.
The
species is the largest tree frog in North America, but it was never
meant to be here. It was introduced to the Florida Keys in the 1920s,
likely as a stowaway brought stateside in shipping crates.
As
a post-doctoral fellow in integrative biology at the University of
South Florida, Roznik works firsthand with Cuban tree frogs.
“They’re
voracious eaters. If you’re feeding them crickets in the lab, they get
pretty excited,” she said. “They’ll try to bite everything in sight,
including your fingers if they’re in the way.”
That
same, voracious appetite is what makes the Cuban tree frog so harmful
to the Florida ecosystem, researchers say. They prey on insects,
lizards, snakes and at least five different species of native frogs.
When all else fails, they even cannibalize other Cuban tree frogs.
But the Cuban tree frog does more than just devastate Florida’s ecology.
Suzanne
Simpson, a conservation lands biologist at the Bayou Land Conservancy
in Texas, has seen them turn into a nuisance for humans as well.
“They
are large enough — believe it or not — to cause power outages by
getting into utility boxes,” she said. “Also, you get reports of someone
who says they have a cat in their walls. Whenever Cuban tree frogs feel
threatened, they will emit this sound that’s almost like a screeching
cat.”
While
Cuban tree frogs have yet to expand beyond Florida, Simpson believes
that they might spread across the Gulf Coast in the future.
“They
can actually, at least in the short term, survive much lower
temperatures than they would ever experience in their native habitat in
Cuba,” Simpson said. “That implies that their temperature niche is wider
than one might think of a tropical species.”
With
temperatures projected to increase in the coming decades, cold snaps
and short freezes might not stop Cuban tree frogs from colonizing more
territory, Simpson said. Americans may soon find the Cuban tree frog
well beyond the confines of Florida, threatening an even larger swath of
American biodiversity.
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