Rock-dwelling Spiny Lizards Take Advantage of Human-disturbed Habitat in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt

abstract: Human land use and land cover change alter key features of the landscape that may favor habitat selection by some species. Lizards are especially sensitive to these alterations because they rely on their external environment for regulating their body temperature. However, because of their...

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Other Authors: Flores, Jennifer (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62703
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-627032020-12-09T05:00:38Z Rock-dwelling Spiny Lizards Take Advantage of Human-disturbed Habitat in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt abstract: Human land use and land cover change alter key features of the landscape that may favor habitat selection by some species. Lizards are especially sensitive to these alterations because they rely on their external environment for regulating their body temperature. However, because of their diverse life-history traits and strategies, some are able to respond well to disturbance by using their habitat in various ways. To understand how they use their habitat and how human modifications may impact their ability to do this, biologists must identify where they occur and the habitat characteristics on which they depend. Therefore, I used species occupancy modeling to determine (1) whether disturbance predicts the presence of two sympatric congeneric (species of the same genus) lizard species Sceloporus grammicus and S. torquatus, and (2) which habitat characteristics are essential for predicting their occupancy and detection. I focused my study in central Mexico, a region of prevalent land use and land cover change. Here, I conducted visual encounter and habitat surveys at 100 1-hectare sites during the spring of 2019. I measured vegetation and ground cover, average tree diameter, and abundance of refuges. I recorded air temperature, relative humidity, and elevation. I summarized sites as either undisturbed or disturbed, based on the presence of human development. I also summarized sites by ecosystem type, desert or forest, based on vegetation composition (i.e., desert-adapted vs. non-desert-adapted plants), evidence of remnant forest, air temperature, and relative humidity. I found that S. torquatus was more likely to be present in disturbed habitat, whereas S. grammicus was more likely to be present in areas with leaf litter, tree cover, and woody debris. S. torquatus was twice as likely to be detected in forests than deserts, and S. grammicus was more likely to be detected at sites with high elevation and high relative humidity, low temperature, and herbaceous and grass cover. These results emphasize the utility of species occupancy modeling for estimating detection and occupancy in dynamic landscapes. Dissertation/Thesis Flores, Jennifer (Author) Martins, Emilia P (Advisor) Bateman, Heather L (Advisor) Zuniga-Vega, J. Jaime (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Biology disturbance habitat selection rock-dwelling Sceloporus species occupancy Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt eng 52 pages Masters Thesis Biology 2020 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62703 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Biology
disturbance
habitat selection
rock-dwelling
Sceloporus
species occupancy
Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt
spellingShingle Biology
disturbance
habitat selection
rock-dwelling
Sceloporus
species occupancy
Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt
Rock-dwelling Spiny Lizards Take Advantage of Human-disturbed Habitat in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt
description abstract: Human land use and land cover change alter key features of the landscape that may favor habitat selection by some species. Lizards are especially sensitive to these alterations because they rely on their external environment for regulating their body temperature. However, because of their diverse life-history traits and strategies, some are able to respond well to disturbance by using their habitat in various ways. To understand how they use their habitat and how human modifications may impact their ability to do this, biologists must identify where they occur and the habitat characteristics on which they depend. Therefore, I used species occupancy modeling to determine (1) whether disturbance predicts the presence of two sympatric congeneric (species of the same genus) lizard species Sceloporus grammicus and S. torquatus, and (2) which habitat characteristics are essential for predicting their occupancy and detection. I focused my study in central Mexico, a region of prevalent land use and land cover change. Here, I conducted visual encounter and habitat surveys at 100 1-hectare sites during the spring of 2019. I measured vegetation and ground cover, average tree diameter, and abundance of refuges. I recorded air temperature, relative humidity, and elevation. I summarized sites as either undisturbed or disturbed, based on the presence of human development. I also summarized sites by ecosystem type, desert or forest, based on vegetation composition (i.e., desert-adapted vs. non-desert-adapted plants), evidence of remnant forest, air temperature, and relative humidity. I found that S. torquatus was more likely to be present in disturbed habitat, whereas S. grammicus was more likely to be present in areas with leaf litter, tree cover, and woody debris. S. torquatus was twice as likely to be detected in forests than deserts, and S. grammicus was more likely to be detected at sites with high elevation and high relative humidity, low temperature, and herbaceous and grass cover. These results emphasize the utility of species occupancy modeling for estimating detection and occupancy in dynamic landscapes. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Biology 2020
author2 Flores, Jennifer (Author)
author_facet Flores, Jennifer (Author)
title Rock-dwelling Spiny Lizards Take Advantage of Human-disturbed Habitat in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt
title_short Rock-dwelling Spiny Lizards Take Advantage of Human-disturbed Habitat in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt
title_full Rock-dwelling Spiny Lizards Take Advantage of Human-disturbed Habitat in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt
title_fullStr Rock-dwelling Spiny Lizards Take Advantage of Human-disturbed Habitat in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt
title_full_unstemmed Rock-dwelling Spiny Lizards Take Advantage of Human-disturbed Habitat in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt
title_sort rock-dwelling spiny lizards take advantage of human-disturbed habitat in the trans-mexican volcanic belt
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62703
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