Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Sept 2016

Tails of the City: Caudal Autotomy in the Tropical Lizard, Anolis cristatellus, in Urban and Natural Areas of Puerto Rico

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Page Range: 435 – 441
DOI: 10.1670/15-039
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Abstract

Urbanization creates drastic changes in habitat and presents considerable challenges and new sources of predation to urban-dwelling herpetofauna. Research on lizards has documented increased rates of mortality in urban areas due to generalist predators such as raccoons, feral cats, and domestic animals. Caudal autotomy (self-amputation of the tail) is a defense mechanism used to escape predation in a wide range and large number of lizard species. The tail is autotomized to evade capture, and in most species with autotomy, the tail is regenerated partially or completely. Caudal autotomy can be used as an indirect measure of predation environment; however, few prior studies have used lizard caudal autotomy to measure the predation environment of urban areas. We compared caudal autotomy rates in the Puerto Rican crested anole, Anolis cristatellus, between urban and natural sites in four Puerto Rican municipalities. Across all municipalities, we found the frequency of caudal autotomy and regeneration to be consistently, significantly higher in urban than in natural areas. Our findings suggest that differences exist in the predation regime experienced by lizards in urban and natural habitats across the island of Puerto Rico. At this time, however, we are not able to identify the specific nature of the difference in predation regime between sites. The difference in autotomy rate that we found may be driven by higher predation pressure in urban areas, differences in the predator assemblage between sites, or simply lower predator efficiency in urban habitats.

Copyright: Copyright 2016 Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles 2016
<sc>Fig</sc>
. 1.
Fig . 1.

Map of Puerto Rico showing paired study sites as well as built-up areas (in gray) as quantified in Gould et al. (2008). Although we actually used samples from two natural and two urban sites in the municipality of Mayagüez (only one each is shown), these sites were each so geographically close that the marker pins would directly overlap on a map of this scale.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 2.
Fig . 2.

Digital x-ray images of anesthetized Anolis cristatellus showing (A) a lizard with a fully original intact tail and (B) a lizard with an autotomized and regenerated tail. Although the original tail is supported by caudal vertebrae throughout its entire length, the regenerated tail (although it can resemble the original tail in length and outward appearance) is supported by a rod of cartilage and is easily identified from radiographs.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 3.
Fig . 3.

More lizards from urban areas tended to have autotomized and regenerated tails than did animals from nearby natural sites. Bars show the proportion of lizards with autotomized and regenerated tails for each site, with whiskers showing ± SE of each proportion.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 4.
Fig . 4.

Distribution of caudal vertebrae number in autotomized and regenerated tails, integrating across all urban (A) and natural (B) sites in this study.


Contributor Notes

Corresponding Author. E-mail: liam.revell@umb.edu
Accepted: 09 Oct 2015
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