4.4 Article

Dumpsters and other anthropogenic structures as habitat for invasive African rock agama lizards in Florida

Journal

BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
Volume 23, Issue 9, Pages 2689-2693

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10530-021-02537-0

Keywords

Habitat use; Garbage; Lizard; Refuges; Resource selection; Vacant niche

Funding

  1. NSF [DBI-1402202]
  2. Alabama Graduate Research Scholars Program (GRSP) through the Alabama Commission for Higher Education

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The invasive species Peter's Rock Agama showed a preference for urban habitats in Florida, particularly around dumpsters, building crevices, and electrical units. These anthropogenic structures provide refuge, thermoregulatory opportunities, and abundant prey, making them attractive habitats for the species. It is suggested that the invasion of A. picticauda in Florida may be exploiting vacant niches in urban habitats during the invasion process.
Invasive species often use habitat differently than native species and can benefit by occupying underutilized habitats during the invasion process. The Peter's Rock Agama (Agama picticauda)-native to savannahs of sub-Saharan Africa-is successfully invading urban habitats in Florida, USA. During a field trip in urban southern Florida, we observed apparently high A. picticauda abundance around dumpsters used for human refuse, potentially because dumpsters provide refuge, thermoregulatory opportunities, abundant arthropod prey, and harbor few competitors. In this study, we surveyed abundance and built resource selection functions to better understand habitat use of A. picticauda in urban southern Florida. We tested whether hypothesized habitat features predictably influenced the abundance and occupancy of A. picticauda among sites and whether individuals used specific habitat features within sites. Across sites, we found A. picticauda abundance was positively correlated with the number of dumpsters, and, within sites, dumpsters were preferentially selected as habitat. Similarly, we also found two other anthropogenic structures, building crevices and electrical units, were positively selected habitats at population and individual scales. We hypothesize that dumpsters, crevices, and electrical units are selected resources because they are underutilized habitats by other species and they provide refuge, beneficial thermoregulatory opportunities, and in the case of dumpsters, foraging opportunities. Our study provides the first quantitative assessment of urban habitat use by non-native A. picticauda, and supports the importance of human structures as habitat. Our results suggest the intriguing possibility that the A. picticauda invasion in Florida may be exploiting a vacant niche in urban habitats during the invasion process.

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