Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 17 Dec 2010

Ecology of Southern African Sandveld Lizards (Lacertidae, Nucras)

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Page Range: 568 – 577
DOI: 10.1643/CE-09-134
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Abstract

Sandveld lizards (genus Nucras) are widespread in southern Africa, but are generally secretive and poorly known. We examined 385 preserved specimens from five species of Nucras collected over a broad time span (104 years) and a geographic area covering most of South Africa and Swaziland. We had three main objectives: to test for sexual size dimorphism, to quantify male and female reproductive cycles, and to determine diet. In addition, we examined the importance of scorpions in the diet of Nucras based on previous studies reporting an unusually high incidence of scorpions in the diet of Kalahari N. tessellata. Males of all species except N. lalandii had significantly larger heads than females of the same body size, although females had significantly greater snout–vent length than males in three of the five species examined. The general reproductive pattern was for females to contain vitellogenic eggs during late spring and early summer. No females simultaneously contained oviductal and vitellogenic eggs, which suggests that females produce only one clutch per season. Clutch size was unrelated to female body size in all species examined. Female follicle volume generally coincided with male testicular volume, indicating for the most part synchronized reproductive cycles between the sexes. Testis volume was generally highest during spring–early summer, with only N. holubi showing a second peak in autumn. We recorded 15 arthropod orders in the diet of Nucras. All species feed on invertebrates, primarily insects, and, to a lesser degree, spiders and centipedes. Termites, grasshoppers, and beetles both numerically and volumetrically dominated their diet. We found no evidence that scorpions form a major part of the diet of any of these five species of Nucras, including N. tessellata from biomes outside the Kalahari Desert.

Copyright: 2010 by the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
Fig. 1
Fig. 1

Snout–vent length (mm) frequency for male and female Nucras spp. Solid arrows indicate minimum female size at sexual maturity; open arrows indicate minimum male size at sexual maturity. A  =  N. holubi, B  =  N. intertexta, C  =  N. lalandii, D  =  N. ornata, E  =  N. tessellata.


Fig. 2
Fig. 2

Volume of largest follicle for Nucras spp. in relation to time of the year. Numbers adjacent to points indicate the number of overlapping values. A  =  N. holubi, B  =  N. intertexta, C  =  N. lalandii, D  =  N. ornata, E  =  N. tessellata.


Fig. 3
Fig. 3

Volume of largest testis for Nucras spp. in relation to time of the year. Numbers adjacent to points indicate the number of overlapping values. A  =  N. holubi, B  =  N. intertexta, C  =  N. lalandii, D  =  N. ornata, E  =  N. tessellata.


Fig. 4
Fig. 4

Distribution of individual prey sizes (volume) consumed by Nucras spp. A  =  N. holubi, B  =  N. intertexta, C  =  N. lalandii, D  =  N. ornata, E  =  N. tessellata.


Contributor Notes

School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Private Bag 3, Wits 2050, South Africa; E-mail:(MVDM) martinhvandermeer@gmail.com
Department of Brain, Behaviour and Evolution, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia; E-mail: martin.whiting@mq.edu.au. Send reprint requests to this address.
Port Elizabeth Museum, P.O. Box 13147, Humewood 6013, South Africa, and Research Associate, Department of Zoology, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, Port Elizabeth, South Africa; E-mail: wrbranch@bayworld.co.za

Associate Editor: J. D. Litzgus.

Received: 20 Jul 2009
Accepted: 13 Jul 2010
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