Nelson Mail

Urban lizards need help

- Will Harvie will.harvie@stuff.co.nz

Your back garden might be a great place to conserve New Zealand’s declining lizards. Many native skinks and geckos have ranges of less than 20 square metres – space found in many back gardens – and new research is asking whether urban ‘‘wildlife gardening’’ might be a necessary way to conserve the species.

Skinks and geckos are fully protected by law and should not be handled or disturbed, says Victoria PhD student Chris Woolley.

But they can be encouraged in back gardens by removing predators and creating lizard-friendly habitats.

‘‘Cities may offer unique opportunit­ies for lizard conservati­on,’’ Woolley and colleagues wrote in a science paper published this month.

Large-scale conservati­on of urban lizards is blue sky thinking at this point, says Woolley. He talks about ‘‘potential for restoratio­n’’.

Other biologists have for years researched lizards in rural and wild areas.

Woolley’s contributi­on is to acknowledg­e that lizards live in cities and start asking if city folk can help stop lizard decline and maybe even reverse it.

‘‘A lot of things have to take place in cities to achieve those lofty goals,’’ he says.

With colleagues, he found that 37 per cent of geckos and 39 per cent of skinks had ranges that historical­ly included the country’s largest six cities.

These animals didn’t probably populate cities. Rather, cities grew up in their habitats.

Based on records going back 20 years, Auckland today has three gecko and four skink species. Hamilton has zero geckos and two skinks. Wellington has three geckos and five skinks.

Nelson has zero geckos and two skinks. Christchur­ch has one gecko and three skinks. Dunedin has zero geckos and two skinks.

These records exclude the invasive rainbow skink from Australia, which is establishe­d in Auckland and Hamilton. There may also be lizard population­s outside urban areas.

Nonetheles­s, ‘‘the diversity of lizards in all of the cities has declined dramatical­ly since human colonisati­on’’, the authors wrote.

Officials have in recent years translocat­ed lizards to fenced enclosures such as Zealandia in Wellington and Riccarton Bush in Christchur­ch, but these sites are small scale and expensive.

Greater opportunit­ies may exist in public reserves and alongside sport and playing fields, but there needs to be ‘‘indigenous-dominated’’ plantings and greater predator control.

Back yards, however, may offer good opportunit­ies, Woolley says. ‘‘There are things you can do to make your garden more wildlife friendly,’’ he says.

‘‘For lizards, we talk about planting dense vegetation, things like grasses, hedges, flaxes and things that provide cover.’’

Untidy gardens are especially good skink habitats, the authors wrote. ‘‘We know that predators are a huge issue and things like crevasses, where skinks and geckos can hide, are really important.’’

Because skinks and geckos are small, their main predators are cats, hedgehogs and mice, he says. Humans can also provide ‘‘basking services’’. Some lizards like to sun themselves on stones and rocks, but also need nearby crevasses and hidey holes if a predator approaches. Others are nocturnal.

Many city Kiwis won’t know they have lizards in their gardens. Indeed, cat owners may only learn about their presence when Tabby presents wounded or dead lizards.

DOC published a guide to lizard gardening last year. The public should ‘‘certainly not’’ attempt to move lizards themselves, Woolley said.

But helping out can be ‘‘quite cool’’ and increasing­ly back garden biodiversi­ty was a ‘‘powerful thing’’, he said.

 ??  ?? Northern grass skinks, above, are the most abundant skink in Wellington and Nelson and are often seen basking on sunny days.
Northern grass skinks, above, are the most abundant skink in Wellington and Nelson and are often seen basking on sunny days.
 ??  ?? The copper skink is thought to be the only species of native lizard found in Hamilton.
The copper skink is thought to be the only species of native lizard found in Hamilton.
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