While "island tameness" is an old idea, there have been few
rigorous studies of the phenomenon. Many aspects remain unclear, including the
mechanisms behind it and the speed at which it evolves in island populations.
A new University of Michigan-led study of Aegean wall lizard populations on
37 Greek islands shows that island tameness is determined by both the diversity
of the local predator populations and the length of time an island has been
separated from the mainland.
The researchers found that as the diversity of predators on an island
increases, so does the distance at which these small lizards start to flee when
they are approached -- an anti-predator response which scientists call the
flight initiation distance. In addition, they found that the longer an island
has been isolated from the mainland, on average, the longer its resident Aegean
wall lizards will wait before fleeing from a predator.
The results suggest that animals living on small, long-isolated islands
face the greatest risk from introduced predators -- such as feral cats and rats
-- and should therefore receive priority in conservation efforts, said U-M
vertebrate ecologist Johannes Foufopoulos, co-author of a paper scheduled for
online publication in the journal Evolution on Dec. 1.
"Being so fearless, these populations are extremely susceptible to any
novel predator that's introduced. In fact, island tameness has caused numerous
island-species extinctions at the hands of human-introduced predators and
pets," said Foufopoulos, an associate professor at the U-M School of
Natural Resources and Environment.
"Determining what factors lead to the loss of effective anti-predator
responses is critical because it provides a fundamental understanding of
evolutionary processes on islands and also helps conservation managers predict
which island species are at most risk," he said.
The first author of the Evolution paper is Kinsey M. Brock, who conducted
the lizard study for her graduate thesis at the School of Natural Resources and
Environment. "This is the first study to systematically test for the
ecological factors that drive island tameness and the rate at which it can
occur," she said.
The study compared anti-predator responses of Aegean wall lizard
populations on the Cyclades Islands in the central Aegean Sea to the
composition of the predator communities and the isolation history of each
island.
Site surveys were conducted to determine the resident lizard predators,
which included rats; birds; vipers, sand boas and other snakes; feral cats; and
stone martens.
Bathymetric data derived from navigation charts, targeted sonar
measurements, and geomorphological reconstructions of past sea levels were used
to determine how long each island has been separated from the Greek mainland.
Some of the oldest islands have been cut off from the mainland for more than
450,000 years.
The researchers looked at how skittish the lizards were by measuring flight
initiation distance, and they examined the likelihood that lizards will shed
their tails by gently squeezing lizard tails between calipers in the
laboratory. Tail-shedding, also know as tail autotomy, is a common but
energetically costly anti-predator defense among lizards, who jettison the
wriggling appendage when attacked and later grow a new tail.
Both the fear response and the propensity for tail-shedding were strongly
associated with predator diversity on an island: The fewer predators present,
the longer the lizards wait to flee and the weaker their tail-shedding ability.
"It would be evolutionary disadvantageous to shed your tail in a
predator-free environment, as the fitness costs range from lowered social
status to reduced locomotor ability and susceptibility to parasites,"
Brock said.
The study showed that not all predators were equally important in shaping
behavior. Fast-moving predators, such as mammals and hawks, were much more
influential than sit-and-wait predators, such as vipers, in driving the
evolution of shy, flighty lizards.
"This makes sense, as shyness is going to be a much less effective
response against sit-and-wait predators that remain hidden until the prey is
within striking distance," Foufopoulos said. The researchers also found
that because larger islands tend to support more diverse predator populations,
anti-predator responses were most dramatically lost on small, predator-poor
islets. And lizards on the oldest islands tended to be the most fearless.
"In summary, our results
indicate that loss of anti-predator defenses is a serious problem for island
organisms and suggest that small, long-isolated island populations stand at the
highest risk from invasive predators and, as such, should receive priority in
conservation efforts," Brock said.
The other authors of the Evolution paper are Peter Bednekoff of
Eastern Michigan University and Panayiotis Pafilis of the University of Athens.
The title of the paper is "Evolution of antipredator behavior in an island
lizard species Podarcis erhardii (Reptilia: Lacertidae): the sum of all
fears?"
The study received financial support from the School of Natural Resources
and Environment, the U-M Museum of Zoology, the U-M International Institute and
the SNRE Envoys.
Journal
Reference:
- Kinsey M. Brock, Peter A. Bednekoff, Panayiotis Pafilis, Johannes Foufopoulos. Evolution of antipredator behavior in an island lizard species,Podarcis erhardii(Reptilia: Lacertidae): The sum of all fears? Evolution, 2014; DOI: 10.1111/evo.12555
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