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Stoichiometric and stable isotope ratios of wild lizards in an urban landscape vary with reproduction, physiology, space and time
Journal article   Open access

Stoichiometric and stable isotope ratios of wild lizards in an urban landscape vary with reproduction, physiology, space and time

Andrew M Durso, Geoffrey D Smith, Spencer B Hudson and Susannah S French
Conservation physiology, Vol.8(1), pp.coaa001-coaa001
02-14-2020
PMCID: PMC7019090
PMID: 32082575

Abstract

body condition carbon community ecology corticosterone ecosystem ecology fasting immunity nitrogen nutritional stress oxidative stress urbanization Uta stansburiana
Lay Summary The chemical signatures of the bodies of lizards contain information about what they eat. We compared lizard chemical signatures between urban and rural areas in southern Utah and found that they have much broader diets in urban areas and that some chemical signatures were related to reproduction. Spatial and temporal variation in stoichiometric and stable isotope ratios of animals contains ecological information that we are just beginning to understand. In both field and lab studies, stoichiometric or isotopic ratios are related to physiological mechanisms underlying nutrition or stress. Conservation and ecosystem ecology may be informed by isotopic data that can be rapidly and non-lethally collected from wild animals, especially where human activity leaves an isotopic signature (e.g. via introduction of chemical fertilizers, ornamental or other non-native plants or organic detritus). We examined spatial and temporal variation in stoichiometric and stable isotope ratios of the toes of Uta stansburiana (side-blotched lizards) living in urban and rural areas in and around St. George, Utah. We found substantial spatial and temporal variation as well as context-dependent co-variation with reproductive physiological parameters, although certain key predictions such as the relationship between δ 15 N and body condition were not supported. We suggest that landscape change through urbanization can have profound effects on wild animal physiology and that stoichiometric and stable isotope ratios can provide unique insights into the mechanisms underlying these processes.
url
https://doi.org/10.1093/conphys/coaa001View
Published (Version of record) Open

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