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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The conservation and landscape genetics of the sand lizard Lacerta agilis

Russell, Liam January 2013 (has links)
Lacerta agilis is a widespread lizard which reaches the western edge of its range in Britain where it is restricted to three geographically separated areas. Recent habitat loss and fragmentation have resulted in a significant decline and it is now a UK conservation priority. Sand lizards from across the Britain were genotyped at 15 microsatellite loci and the resulting dataset used to address questions regarding the conservation genetics, phylogeography and influence of landscape on patterns of genetic diversity. Genetic diversity of Dorset populations compared favourably to European examples. However, diversity was significantly lower in Surrey and Merseyside. Significant genetic structuring occurred across small geographical distances even in relatively unfragmented landscapes. Lacerta agilis colonised Britain via a land bridge across the North Sea and reached the limits of its current distribution approximately 5,000 years BP. Subsequent climate cooling has resulted in a range contraction to areas where the habitat is suitable for the successful incubation of eggs. A resistance surface was used to investigate the effect of landscape configuration on patterns of genetic diversity at multiple scales in Dorset. At a local scale, habitat type and rivers were the best predictors of genetic diversity. At a regional scale, rivers were most important, whereas habitat type and artificial barriers were less important. Artificial barriers may be more significant than the results suggest as their true effect has not yet been realised due to a genetic time-lag. Male lizards from Merseyside exhibited significant differences in colour and pattern to the Dorset and Surrey populations. However, despite difference in colour, all populations were equally green, which is in keeping with the importance of ‘greenness' as a sexual signal. The implications of these findings for the conservation of L. agilis are discussed in the context of current challenges and predicted future global climate change.
2

Predation on lizard eggs by ants: interaction modifications in an unstable physical environment

Chalcraft, David Richard 13 February 2009 (has links)
The importance of abiotic influences on the strength of biotic interactions is largely unknown. To explain large annual fluctuations in the population size of the tropical lizard, Anolis limifrons, on Barro Colorado Island, Panama, I hypothesized that annual variation in lizard population size is the result of modifications in the rate of predation on lizard eggs by Solenopsis ants induced by annual variation in wet season rainfall. I tested this hypothesis by manipulating water availability on experimental plots to Simulate the wettest (HW) and driest (LW) wet seasons in the last twenty years. The mean time to find and attack eggs by Solenopsis ants was significantly shorter on HW plots (range=6.6-21.7 days) than LW plots (range=17.8-30.8 days). Exponential models that regressed time on the cumulative percent mortality indicated that 1) the rate of predation was 3-5 times faster on HW plots than LW plots and 2) the predicted mortality of lizard eggs during their 42 day incubation period was 82.2-95.7% on HW plots and 56.1-58.6% on LW plots. Thus, the amount of rainfall during the wet season affected the population size of A. limifrons by modifying the strength of the interaction between Solenopsis ants and the eggs of A. limifrons. / Master of Science

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