Date: March 24, 2017
Source: Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo
It
all began with a photograph of a lizard posted on Facebook in August
2015 by the Brazilian Herpetology group. It was a strange lizard that
had been observed in a residential area near the Port of Santos, São
Paulo State, by Ricardo Samelo, a biology student at the Santos Coast
campus of the Federal University of São Paulo (UNIFESP).
"Everyone
in the group was excited about that photograph. It was different from
any other lizard ever seen in Brazil," recalled herpetologist Ivan
Prates, currently studying for a PhD at the City University of New York
(CUNY), with Ana Carolina Carnaval, a professor at the same university,
as his supervisor.
They
immediately began trying to identify the species. The strongest
candidate was Anolis carolinensis. The genus Anolis comprises 391
species, almost all of which live in the Caribbean and in Central and
South America. A single species, A. carolinensis, is endemic to North
America.
"I
commented on the photograph to my supervisor, Prof. Carnaval, and we
decided to find out what species it was," Prates said. "I contacted
Ricardo Samelo and took the opportunity while attending a conference in
Brazil to go into the field with him in Santos to try to solve the
riddle.”
The
researchers could hardly imagine they were about to identify the first
occurrence in South America of a species endemic to Cuba, A. porcatus,
which is invasive, predatory and potentially harmful to Brazilian fauna.
The
identification was published in the South American Journal of
Herpetology. The study was supported by FAPESP and the US National
Science Foundation (NSF) via the research project "Dimensions US-BIOTA
São Paulo: a multidisciplinary framework for biodiversity prediction in
the Brazilian Atlantic forest hotspot.”
When
they arrived at the place where Samelo had seen the lizard that caused a
stir in their social network, the two biologists observed a large
number of lizards.
"At
that time, we still thought it was A. carolinensis and found dozens of
the strange lizards," Prates said. "We decided to ask people living
nearby if they were familiar with the lizards. They all said they were.
The same thing happened when we went to investigate in Guarujá and São
Vicente, where these lizards are also abundant. We expect the same thing
to happen in Cubatão. We've found males, females and hatchlings,
showing the invasive species is procreating and well established on the
São Paulo coast.”
Back
in New York, Prates recruited biology student Leyla Hernandez to help
study the DNA from samples collected from the lizards to determine
whether they were really the US-native species A. carolinensis. They
were not. The DNA belonged to the Cuban species A. porcatus.
"The
genus Anolis is a complicated research subject," Prates said. "There
are hundreds of species, many of which are very similar. Furthermore,
they can hybridize by interbreeding, which makes identification
particularly hard.”
Invasive
species are undesirable because they compete with native species for
the available resources. Nevertheless, some invaders are worse than
others. That may be the case on the São Paulo coast.
"A.
carolinensis is sold as a pet in the US," Prates said. "Therefore, that
was our first hypothesis to explain the introduction of a new species
in the Santos area. Someone who had it as a pet must have released it.
Alternatively, it might have escaped or been lost.”
However,
A. porcatus is not widely sold as a pet. "It's an exotic species and
relatively large at about 15 cm in length," Prates said. "These lizards
are generalist predators. They mainly eat arthropods, but they can also
prey on small mammals, such as mice, and even on other lizards."
This
species has been sighted in the Dominican Republic, he added, where it
is also invasive and competes with native lizards. This suggests its
introduction into the Santos area may threaten the survival of local
lizard populations. Worse, it could take up residence in neighboring
areas.
- porcatus has also invaded Florida, which is near its original Cuban habitat. "In the US case, a few specimens might have gotten there by sea, as they're capable of surviving on branches or other pieces of floating plant debris, such as tree trunk fragments or palm leaves," said Brazilian-born Carnaval, a professor in CUNY's Biology Department.
B.
The floating invasion hypothesis does not apply to the Brazilian case.
The distance between Cuba and Santos is 6,100 km. "Our best hypothesis
is that A. porcatus arrived in Brazil by ship, possibly in a container
or in the cargo hold of a merchant vessel. This idea is reinforced by
the fact that everywhere we've found communities of A. porcatus, they're
close to a container yard in the Port of Santos," Carnaval said.
"Our
DNA study suggests these lizards could have come here from Florida,
where they're also exotic, rather than directly from Cuba," Prates
added.
According
to Carnaval, the identification of A. porcatus in the Baixada Santista
area was a one-off study for her laboratory. "Like most of the team at
my lab, Ivan Prates researches the demographic history of other species
of Anolis that live in the Amazon and Atlantic Rainforest biomes in
Brazil and their responses to climate change," she said.
"Our
project is a very large undertaking that involves biologists who are
working on biodiversity systematics and documentation, population
genetics and physiology with geologists, geographers, climatologists and
environmental engineers.”
The
aim of this research is to understand the past in order to predict the
future. "We document general patterns of species diversity and endemism
including genetic lineages throughout the Atlantic Rainforest in order
to understand how these patterns have emerged and changed in the last
120,000 years," Carnaval explained. "We strongly emphasize the responses
of species in the Atlantic Rainforest to climate change in the past as a
basis for more realistic predictions of potential responses to future
climate change."
Story Source:
Materials provided by Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
/story_source
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