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The Lizards of Mrcaru
Italian wall lizards introduced to a tiny island off the
coast of Croatia are evolving in ways that would normally take millions of
years to play out, new research shows.
In just a few decades the 5-inch-long (13-centimeter-long)
lizards have developed a completely new gut structure, larger heads, and a
harder bite, researchers say.
In 1971, scientists transplanted five adult pairs of the
reptiles from their original island home in Pod Kopiste to the tiny neighboring
island of Pod Mrcaru, both in the south Adriatic Sea.
Genetic testing on the Pod Mrcaru lizards confirmed
that the modern population of more than 5,000 Italian wall lizards are all
descendants of the original ten lizards left behind in the 1970s.
While the experiment was more than 30 years in the making,
it was not by design, according to Duncan Irschick, a study author and biology
professor at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
After scientists transplanted the reptiles, the Croatian War
of Independence erupted, ending in the mid-1990s. The researchers couldn't get
back to island because of the war, Irschick said.
In 2004, however, tourism began to open back up, allowing
researchers access to the island laboratory.
"We didn't know if we would find a lizard there. We had
no idea if the original introductions were successful," Irschick said.
What they found, however, was shocking.
"The island was swarming with lizards," he said.
The findings were published in March in the journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The new habitat once had its own healthy population of
lizards, which were less aggressive than the new implants, Irschick said. The new species wiped out the indigenous lizard populations,
although how it happened is unknown, he said. The transplanted lizards adapted to their new environment in
ways that expedited their evolution physically, Irschick explained.
Pod Mrcaru, for example, had an abundance of plants for the
primarily insect-eating lizards to munch on. Physically, however, the lizards
were not built to digest a vegetarian diet.
Researchers found that the lizards developed cecal
valves—muscles between the large and small intestine—that slowed down food
digestion in fermenting chambers, which allowed their bodies to process the
vegetation's cellulose into volatile fatty acids.
"They evolved an expanded gut to allow them to process
these leaves," Irschick said, adding it was something that had not been
documented before. "This was a brand-new structure."
Along with the ability to digest plants came the ability to
bite harder, powered by a head that had grown longer and wider.
Graph depicting diet of Mrcaru lizards |
The rapid physical evolution also sparked changes in the
lizard's social and behavioral structure, he said. For one, the plentiful food
sources allowed for easier reproduction and a denser population.
Such physical transformation in just 30 lizard generations
takes evolution to a whole new level, Irschick said. It would be akin to humans evolving and growing a new
appendix in several hundred years, he said. "That's unparalleled. What's most important is how fast
this is," he said.
While researchers do know the invader's impact on its
reptile brethren, they do not know how the species impacts local vegetation or
insects, a subject of future study, Irschick said.
The study demonstrates that a lot of change happens in
island environments, said Andrew Hendry, a biology professor at Montreal's
McGill University.
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