Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/19466
Title: Foraging activity and diet of four sympatric lizard species in a tropical rainforest
Authors: Gasnier, Thierry Ray Jehlen
Magnusson, William Ernest
Lima, Albertina Pimental
Keywords: Ambush Predation
Diet
Lizard
Rainforest
Sit-and-wait Predation
Anolis Punctatus
Anolis Punctatus
Formicidae
Iguanidae
Iguanidae
Kentropyx Calcarata
Kentropyx Calcarata
Plica Umbra
Plica Umbra
Squamata
Teiidae
Teiidae
Umbra
Uranoscodon
Uranoscodon Superciliosa
Issue Date: 1994
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Journal of Herpetology
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 28, Número 2, Pags. 187-192
Abstract: An ambush predator (Uranoscodon superciliosa, Iguanidae) eats more hidden and slow moving prey than the most active forager (Kentropyx calcarata, Teiidae). Plica umbra (Iguanidae), an ant specialist, has similar foraging intensity to Anolis punctatus (Iguanidae) and is more active than U. superciliosa, which are generalist insectivores. Plica umbra does not have the behavioral and morphological adaptations for myrmecophagy that commonly occur in desert lizards. Uranoscodon superciliosa also does not specialize on large prey, as predicted for extreme "sit-and-wait' lizards in tropical rainforests. Differences in the consequences of foraging mode for the diet of lizards between arid and forest areas may be affected by differences in the availability of prey and their distribution in the environment. -from Authors
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.2307/1564619
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