Global Assessment of Reptile Distributions
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The Hot Eurasian nightlife - How do different environmental forces affect nocturnality in lizards?

10/10/2017

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In a recent publication in Global Ecology and Biogeography we explored the prevalence of nocturnality amongst Eurasian lizard species and tried to understand what drives these patterns.
Most animals – at least those that live above ground – are active either during the day or during the night. Being active at either time of day carries with it unique benefits and challenges, and thus particular adaptations. Because of this being nocturnal or diurnal is a trait that is pretty rigid amongst closely related species.
Lizards as a group are thought to be ancestrally diurnal. Most of them remain so to this day. Furthermore, they are ectotherms and are predominantly small bodied tetrapods and could thus be particularly affected by the climatic differences between day and night. For this work we collected distribution range and activity time data for all 1,113 lizard species found throughout mainland Eurasia. We then looked at links between richness patterns of lizards with either temperature or productivity.

Picture
Cyrtodactylus trilatofasciatus (Photo: Lee Grismer)
We found that nocturnal lizards have the highest species richness in the tropics and in deserts, and their richness decreases when they get closer to the North Pole. Nocturnal lizards are precluded altogether from the coldest regions inhabited by lizards – in high mountains and the highest latitudes.
Picture
Stenodactylus sthenodactylus (Photo Uri Roll)
Ambient temperature has a strong influence on richness patterns of both diurnal and nocturnal lizards, where species numbers increase with an increase in temperature. Productivity was found to be more tightly related to the proportion of nocturnal species – again in a positive relationship.

We think that our results point towards the fact that low temperatures are a limiting factor for lizard activity period. It is possible that the year-round warm nights of tropic regions enabled lizards to move towards nocturnal activity. In hot deserts, perhaps the combination of hot days and aridity make diurnal activity less attractive, whereas nocturnal activity can provide shelter from these extreme conditions
Author: Enav Vidan
Picture
Stenodactylus doriae (Photo Uri Roll)
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