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Hey Lizard Face, Want to Join My Social Group? [LiveScience 2010-10-07] latin dict size=19   common dict size=582
이미지 정보 Original File Name: night-lizards-101007-02 - Desert Night Lizard, Xantusia vigilis.jpg Resolution: 650x432 File Size: 61711 Bytes Upload Time: 2010:10:08 08:24:36
올린이 이름 (메일주소): News (from@livescience.com)
사진 제목 Hey Lizard Face, Want to Join My Social Group? [LiveScience 2010-10-07]
Hey Lizard Face, Want to Join My Social Group? [LiveScience 2010-10-07]; Image ONLY
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Hey Lizard Face, Want to Join My Social Group? [LiveScience 2010-10-07]

[Photo] Desert night lizards(Xantusia vigilis, Order: Squamata, Family: Xantusiidae) live in family groups. Pictured above is an adult female with her 3-day-old offspring. Credit: Mitch Mulks.


Lizards have been discovered in the Mojave Desert that, like us, live in families and give birth to live young.

The fact these reptiles give birth to live young could explain why they live in families, researchers suggest.

Evolutionary biologist Alison Davis, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California, Berkeley, investigated desert night lizards (Xantusia vigilis). These unusual reptiles are viviparous, giving birth to live young instead of laying eggs, and rather than being loners prefer to stick together in family groups.

"Night lizard is actually a misnomer," Davis said. "When the species was first discovered in the mid-1800s, scientists initially assumed that they must be nocturnal for two reasons — they had vertical pupils like a cat, which is quite common among animals that are active and need to see well at night, and scientists never saw these particular lizards running around during the day, even though many other lizard species are quite conspicuous and like to bask in the sun. Thus, they named them night lizards."

Only later did scientists discover they are not nocturnal.

"They are just incredibly secretive, and they hide all the time underneath fallen logs, rocks, and other debris and rarely move outside of these cover objects, which is why no one ever saw them out and about," Davis said. "It's pretty dark underneath logs even during the day, so vertical pupils help them see better in this low-light environment — but they're not actually night lizards after all."

Hidden under Joshua trees

When Davis was a graduate student at the University of California, Santa Cruz, she found young and old lizards huddling together every winter beneath fallen Joshua trees and other desert plant debris.

"Very little research had been done on these lizards since the 1960s, but one paper from that time period mentioned that researchers found multiple lizards underneath single logs in the winter," Davis recalled. "So I went out into the desert to look for these fabled groups underneath Joshua tree logs, and I didn't have to find many before I started to see a pattern — the groups often contained one adult female, one adult male, and babies of several different ages."

Genetic analyses of these reptiles revealed the young lizards stayed with their mother, father and siblings for up to three years after birth. (The lizards have a life span of up to 8 to 10 years.) Some groups stuck together under the same fallen log year after year, forming what the researchers termed dynasties.

"This is remarkable, given the fact that in most species of lizards, individuals actively avoid each other," Davis said.

Some 20 lizard species are thought to form family groups. Only two of these lay eggs. This suggests that viviparity, or live birth, is crucial for the evolution of such family ties.

"Giving live birth instead of laying eggs allows mothers and offspring to interact, and we propose that this is how babies end up staying with their parents in the first place," Davis told LiveScience. "In lizards, live birth predisposes an animal to form a family group."

How to capture a lizard

The scientists found it daunting capturing the lizards for study. Adults, which are 3 to 5 inches (7.6 to 12.7 centimeters) long from their snout to the tips of the tails, were relatively easy to find, but the babies are tiny, about the weight of a toothpick, and perfectly camouflaged, with skin the color of the sand where they are typically found half-buried.

"You have to know what you are looking for," Davis said. She and her colleagues peered under hundreds of logs searching for the reptiles over the course of five years, eventually marking more than 2,000 individual lizards in their study.

Biologically, lizards are very different from both mammals and birds, "yet a few species of lizards have evolved a social system around nuclear family members that is nearly identical to what we see in ground squirrels, primates and woodpeckers," Davis said. (Of course, there are eccentric mammals such as the platypus, which lay eggs rather than bearing live young.)

"Whenever very distant species independently evolve the same trait, scientists can compare similarities and differences among these species to figure out what promotes the evolution of that trait," Davis explained. "For birds, mammals and now lizards, it appears that the babies remaining at home with their parents is key to the evolution of sociality."

This similarity between widely separated groups of animals "helps us to predict where similar group behaviors may be found in other species," said researcher Barry Sinervo at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

"Our study helps inspire researchers to look for complex, family-based social systems in animals that aren't traditionally considered for studies of sociality, like lizards, since complex social behavior was thought to only really occur in birds and mammals," Davis added.

The baby lizards appear to feed themselves, receiving no direct care from their parents or siblings. Still, Davis suspects there are other survival advantages the lizards get from group living.

"The most exciting research quantifies survival and reproductive success benefits that social lizards experience but which solitary lizards don't," Davis said about her ongoing work.

The scientists detailed their findings online Oct. 6 in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

출처: LiveScience - http://www.livescience.com

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The Desert Night Lizard Xantusia vigilis is a night lizard native to southern California east of the Sierras and San Gabriel Mountains into Baja California, southern Nevada, southwestern Utah and extreme western Arizona.
Like all night lizards, the desert night lizard is viviparous, giving birth to live young and producing 1 to 3 young from August to December. The night lizard is 1½ to 2¾ inches long with a tail roughly the same length. The lizard's coloring is usually gray, yellow-brownish or olive. Despite their name, night lizards are active during the day. They are known to easily to change their color, from light olive (usually during the evening) to dark brown during the day. It is a good climber and usually eats termites, small insects, spiders and other arthropods.
It is a secretive lizard of arid and semi-arid locales. During the day it may be found under fallen debris of desert plants and in rock crevices. It is usually associated with varieties of yucca such as the Joshua Tree, Spanish Dagger, and Spanish Bayonet.

The Yucca Night Lizard, Xantusia vigilis vigilis, is a subspecies.
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