Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

How do lizards survive a big storm?

- By Seth Borenstein

WASHINGTON — Tropical lizards have a stick-toitivenes­s in high wind that puts TV weather reporters to shame. Now we know why, thanks in part to a high-powered leaf blower.

Hurricanes Irma and Maria put a group of little tree-hugging lizards to the test, and scientists were perfectly positioned to see which reptiles survived and why. Then, Harvard researcher­s cranked up the leaf blower to observe how 47 of the Caribbean critters held onto a wooden rod.

Under tropical stormforce winds, the lizards lounged. As the wind speed cranked up, they still held on, although it got tougher. Even at 102 mph, the lizards grasped the pole with two clingy front feet while their tails and back legs flapped in the wind like a flag.

“All the lizard needs is an inside out umbrella and the image would be perfect,” study lead author Colin Donihue said. Bigger toe pads helped lizards

But there’s only so much a little lizard can take. At 108 mph, it was flying lizard time.

Don’t worry. No lizard was harmed in the lab test.

“They do go flying in the air, but it is softly into the net and everybody was returned back home” unharmed, said Donihue, a Harvard evolutiona­ry biologist.

The lizards’ secret weapon to surviving hurricanes? The survivors had 6 to 9 percent bigger toe pads, significan­tly longer front limbs and smaller back limbs, compared with the population before the storm, according to a study in the journal Nature. The study is the first to show natural selection due to hurricane, Donihue said.

By coincidenc­e, Donihue and colleagues had been measuring and studying lizards just before the storms blew into the Turks and Caicos Islands last September. They returned several weeks later to see if there was a difference in the surviving population.

They found that the survivors were a bit lighter overall despite the bulkedup front. Key were those toe pads — they are at most about half the size of a pencil’s eraser, Donihue said. It also explains why island lizards have bigger toe pads than inland Central American lizards, a difference that had baffled scientists. hurricanes.

Outside the study.

“This study provides exciting insight into the effects of extreme natural events,” said Pennsylvan­ia State University biologist Tracy Langkilde, who wasn’t part of the study. experts praised

 ?? COLIN DONIHUE 2017 ??
COLIN DONIHUE 2017

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