Editorial Type:
Article Category: Other
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Online Publication Date: 01 Sept 2014

Cryptic and Complex Nesting in the Yellow-Spotted Monitor, Varanus panoptes

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Page Range: 363 – 370
DOI: 10.1670/13-006
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Abstract

Despite the general importance of nest site choice in reproductive success in taxa with little or no parental care, little is known for reptiles other than turtles. Here we report on the nesting ecology of the Yellow-Spotted Monitor, Varanus panoptes, a large tropical lizard that utilizes warrens (concentrated groups of burrows) in northern Australia. We used radio-telemetry, remote photography, and the complete excavation of a warren to test the hypotheses that 1) warrens are used by multiple individual V. panoptes; and if so, 2) they are used for communal nesting; or alternatively 3) they are used for communal estivation during the dry season. At least six individual V. panoptes utilized the warren system including four females and two males, and burrows were excavated by both sexes. Excavation of the warren revealed no estivating lizards at a time when four radio-telemetered V. panoptes had begun estivation. However, we found two nests in the warren, indicative of either communal nesting or multiple clutches of the same female. Nests were deeper than that recorded for any other reptile and were structurally complex. We discuss the implications of the depth and structure of the nesting burrow for the thermal and hydric environment of the eggs and for hatchling emergence. The warren's usage by multiple individuals raises the possibility that the severe declines in V. panoptes caused by invasive Cane Toads (Bufo marinus) may have important implications for the V. panoptes social structure.

Copyright: 2014
<sc>Fig</sc>
. 1. 
Fig . 1. 

Aboveground view of part of the V. panoptes warren system showing three burrow entrances in the foreground and two in the background (upper right). Photo: R. Ellis.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 2. 
Fig . 2. 

Monitor lizard activity at one burrow in the V. panoptes warren system. (upper) Variation in daily activity times; (lower) seasonal variation in activity. As evidenced by its size (24 cm wide at the entrance), the burrow was excavated by a male.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 3. 
Fig . 3. 

Adult V. panoptes active at the warren system. (upper) A smaller individual, possibly a gravid female based on her distended appearance, emerges from the burrow at around midday; (lower) a larger male approaches the burrow early in the morning.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 4. 
Fig . 4. 

Excavating the V. panoptes warren system. (upper) Above view showing two areas, each of which contained a nest. (lower) Side view of the top area from (the upper photo), showing the depth of the burrows. Photo: R. Ellis.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 5. 
Fig . 5. 

Diagram of a V. panoptes nesting burrow (side view). The burrow was mostly plugged with soil but the egg chamber was not. Plugged soil was dry and compacted in the long burrow arms but soft and moist in the spiral section. Measurements are in centimeters.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 6. 
Fig . 6. 

Photographs from above of an excavated V. panoptes nesting burrow. (upper) The ‘corkscrew' portion of the burrow, just above the nest chamber. (lower) The corkscrew excavated out, showing the nest chamber and eggs. Photo: R. Ellis.


Contributor Notes

Corresponding author. E-mail: jseandoody@gmail.com
Accepted: 13 Sept 2013
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