1. Life history and ecology of the elegant snake-eyed skink (Cryptoblepharus pulcher) in south-eastern Australia.
- Author
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Pike, David A., Roznik, Elizabeth A., Webb, Jonathan K., and Shine, Richard
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LIFE history theory , *ECOLOGY , *BODY size , *SKINKS , *NATURAL history , *REPTILES , *COLUBRIDAE - Abstract
Detailed information on life history and ecology is essential for successful conservation and management. However, we have relatively little detailed data on the life history and ecology of most small lizard species, relative to other vertebrates, especially those that have undergone recent taxonomic changes. We studied the ecology of the elegant snake-eyed skink (Cryptoblepharus pulcher), a lizard that occurs on trees, fences, walls, and rock outcroppings in eastern Australia that spans temperate to tropical environments. In our temperate-zone study population living in natural habitat, individuals are active year-round, and gravid females were found during the months of September through December. Sexual maturity is reached in 12 months, lifespan is at least three years, and clutch size is typically two eggs. In laboratory incubation experiments, larger eggs were more likely to hatch. Low incubation temperatures (averaging 23 ± 7.5°C versus high temperatures averaging 26 ± 7.5°C) increased incubation duration significantly (range 56–72 days versus 40–51 days) and reduced the body size of hatchlings significantly (17.8 mm versus 18.7 mm snout–vent length). Skinks sheltered beneath small rocks that were not shared simultaneously with predatory snakes, and that reached average temperatures that were up to 3°C warmer during the day than unused rocks. Preferred microhabitats include substrates of rock or soil, and the largest rocks were occasionally shared by up to four individuals of all body size/sex combinations (5.8% of observations were shared, 30.2% of individual rocks were shared). Our study expands upon knowledge of the widespread genus Cryptoblepharus by providing detailed life history and ecological information on C. pulcher that can serve as a baseline for future studies. Understanding the natural history of species is essential for successful conservation and management. Our study investigates the life history and ecology of elegant snake-eyed skinks (Cryptoblepharus pulcher) in south-eastern Australia. This species reaches maturity within one year, has a lifespan of at least three years, has an average clutch size of two eggs, and shelters under rocks that are warmer than unused rocks, and occasionally shared with conspecifics, but not predatory snakes. Photo by David A. Pike. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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