Abstract

Through 17 years and from a sample of 7,790 faecal pellets and 26,346 prey items, we studied the diet of the Balearic lizard Podarcis lilfordi in Aire Island (Menorca, Balearic Islands, Spain). We analysed the diet in terms of prey frequencies, as well as by their volume and biomass contributions. The diet of the Balearic lizard was extremely variable through the years, months and areas under study. The dominance of small clumped prey, particularly ants, was confirmed. However, the main contribution by volume corresponded to beetles, with a relevant role for Diplopoda and terrestrial Isopoda during some months and at particular areas of the island. Several prey items were probably captured at the base of shrubs, under stones or inside rock crevices. Therefore, our estimations of electivity would only be reliable for epigeal and flying prey. The capacity of the Balearic lizard to include marine subsidies in its diet, such as coastal crustaceans, is noteworthy. Also, its consumption of carrion from carcasses of gulls and rabbits and leftovers from human visitors is remarkable. Juvenile conspecifics can also be a sporadic food resource, especially during the second half of summer, whereas the consumption of vegetal matter is constant for each whole year. The shifts of vegetal exploitation among areas of the island and months take place according to availability of different plant species at each area or during a given period. Thus, lizards are able to conduct a thorough monitoring of plant phenology, exploiting a large variety of plant species. Omnivory does not imply the indiscriminate inclusion of any edible food in its diet. Rather, the inclusion of several food items means the adoption of a wide range of foraging behaviours adapted to the exploitation of each food resource.

Highlights

  • Determinants of lizard's diets are complex and involve, among other factors, the interplay of evolutionary history, body size, microhabitat characteristics and prey availability [1]

  • In this work we studied the diet of the Balearic lizard in Aire Island along a period of 17 years

  • From the whole sample of 7,790 faecal pellets, we found 26,346 prey items belonging to 23 different prey categories

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Summary

Introduction

Determinants of lizard's diets are complex and involve, among other factors, the interplay of evolutionary history, body size, microhabitat characteristics and prey availability [1]. Variation in dietary characteristics among species drives several ecological and evolutionary processes. Diets in islands can be exceedingly different than in continents, because island life deviates in many ways from mainland ecological conditions [2]. The Balearic lizard, Podarcis lilfordi, is an active forager. In Mediterranean lizards, the plesiomorphic condition was insectivory, but omnivory was adopted by several species, incorporating vegetal matter and nutrients from other sources in their diet [3,4,5]. The extent of omnivory and its relation to insular characteristics and particular traits of lizard populations still remain largely unknown

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