Publication | Closed Access
Regional Distribution of a Mediterranean Lizard: Influence of Habitat Cues and Prey Abundance
109
Citations
29
References
1991
Year
Quantitative DistributionLizard AbundanceEngineeringPredator-prey InteractionSocial SciencesBiogeographyInterspecific Behavioral InteractionRegional DistributionPrey AbundanceConservation BiologyBiodiversityRegional GradientGeographyEcosystem InteractionMediterranean LizardEvolutionary BiologyRange ShiftAnimal BehaviorSpatial Ecology
We studied the distribution of a common Medi- terranean lacertid lizard, Psammodromus algirus (L.) 1758, on nineteen sites within a regional gradient of homoge- neous yet contrasted habitats. This scale was large enough to allow line-transect estimates of lizard abundance, which were related to quantitative (and when possible multivari- ate) measurements of the structure and floristic composition of vegetation, the abundance of arthropod prey, the relative density of other lizard species, and the climatic data obtained from nearby meteorological stations. Neither the climate not the abundance of other lizards seemed to condi- tion the quantitative distribution of the species. The positive influence of broad-leaved forests on the abundance of P. more directly related to the ecology of lizards than floristic composition per se. Thus, population levels were most highly correlated with the cover of shrubs over 20 cm in height, and once this stnictural requirement was met, they increased with the abundance of potential prey (itself condi- tioned by vegetation cover at the ground leve1 and litter cover). We suggest that our results should be interpreted in the context of thermoregulatory, predator avoidance and movement minimization strategies whose influence on sur- vival, and hence abundance, could probably be applied to other insectivorous lizards from temperate zones.
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