4.5 Article

Habitat Partitioning and Overlap by Large Lacertid Lizards in Southern Europe

Journal

DIVERSITY-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/d13040155

Keywords

enhanced vegetation index; Lacerta; Mediterranean; niche partitioning; Sauria; Timon

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The study revealed climate niche partitioning among lacertid lizards in south-western Europe, with overlapping in transitional zones where species maintain segregation through responses to vegetation cover. Phylogenetically related species tend to share large parts of their habitat niches, while the occurrence of independent evolutionary lineages contributes to regional species richness.
South-western Europe has a rich diversity of lacertid lizards. In this study, we evaluated the occupancy patterns and niche segregation of five species of lacertids, focusing on large-bodied species (i.e., adults having >75 mm snout-vent length) that occur in south-western Europe (Italian to the Iberian Peninsula). We characterized the niches occupied by these species based on climate and vegetation cover properties. We expected some commonality among phylogenetically related species, but also patterns of habitat segregation mitigating competition between ecologically equivalent species. We used multivariate ordination and probabilistic methods to describe the occupancy patterns and evaluated niche evolution through phylogenetic analyses. Our results showed climate niche partitioning, but with a wide overlap in transitional zones, where segregation is maintained by species-specific responses to the vegetation cover. The analyses also showed that phylogenetically related species tend to share large parts of their habitat niches. The occurrence of independent evolutionary lineages contributed to the regional species richness favored by a long history of niche divergence.

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