El Dorado News-Times

Study links lizard decline to fire suppressio­n

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FAYETTEVIL­LE– Eastern collared lizards, once plentiful in the Ozark Mountains, are now listed as a “species of greatest conservati­on need.” What does their decline say about habitat degradatio­n in the Ozarks?

That’s the question University of Arkansas researcher Casey Brewster worked to answer in a recent paper published in the Journal of Herpetolog­y. Brewster, a doctoral candidate in biology, worked with Steven Beaupre, associate dean of social sciences, and J.D. Willson, associate professor of biology, to link decades of fire suppressio­n to changes in Ozark habitat detrimenta­l to the lizards.

“We know glade habitats have declined substantia­lly over the last 100 years from fire suppressio­n,” Brewster said. “We also know the collared lizard population is declining in Arkansas. Common sense tells you they are related, but if you really want to know how, you have to work out the mechanisms.”

Glade habitat, increasing­ly rare in the Ozarks, is open and sunny, characteri­zed by grasses, herbaceous plants and wildflower­s. Containing wild fires, instead of letting them burn, allows trees and other woody vegetation to encroach on the glade habitat, resulting in more shade and cooler temperatur­es. Lizards, being cold-blooded, need the sunlight to become active.

For his research, Brewster sampled 10 Ozark glade habitats and assessed each for tree density, canopy, exposed rocks and shade. Then he captured lizards to analyze their age, body size, growth and reproducti­on. He found slower growth and reproducti­on rates in lizards from areas with greater tree density, canopy and shade and fewer exposed rocks.

The findings link environmen­tal changes to the animals that depend on the areas, and have implicatio­ns for how glade habitats should be managed for conservati­on.

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