New literature alert!

In Journal of Animal Ecology
Dufour, Clark, Herrel, and Losos

Abstract

 

  1. Invasive species are a world‐wide threat to biodiversity. Yet, our understanding of biological invasions remains incomplete, partly due to the difficulty of tracking and studying behavioural interactions in recently created species interactions.
  2. We tested whether the interactions between the recently introduced invasive lizard Anolis cristatellus and the native Anolis oculatus in Dominica have led to changes in species recognition and aggressive behaviour of the native species.
  3. The use of realistic robots allowed us to test the behavioural response of 131 A. oculatus males towards relevant and controlled conspecific versus heterospecific stimuli, directly in the field and in two contexts (allopatry vs. sympatry).
  4. Our results show that species recognition evolved prior to sympatry in A. oculatus. Moreover, interspecific competition resulted in an increase in the time spent displaying and a divergence in the aggressive behaviour of the native species towards conspecifics versus heterospecifics. Inherent species recognition and higher aggressive behaviour may limit species coexistence as they are expected to favour A. oculatus during territorial interactions with A. cristatellus.
  5. While more studies are needed to understand the causes of these behavioural shifts and their consequences on long‐term species coexistence, the present study highlights the role of behaviour as a first response to interspecific interactions.

 

 

Dufour, C. M., Clark, D. L., Herrel, A., & Losos, J. B. (2020). Recent biological invasion shapes species recognition and aggressive behavior in a native species: a behavioral experiment using robots in the field. Journal of Animal Ecology.

Latest posts by Kristin Winchell (see all)