ABSTRACT
Displacement occurs during the movement of an organism and can be defined as a change in spatial position, being influenced by biotic and abiotic factors. Measuring the displacement of organisms within their home range is relevant for understanding their use of space and can reveal possible causes and consequences of their movements. During part of the dry season in a semi-arid region of Northeastern Brazil, we marked and observed syntopic Tropidurus hispidus and Tropidurus semitaeniatus individuals in a rocky habitat, and compared their locomotive parameters. We also evaluated the existence of relationships between locomotion and morphometry (snout–vent length and body mass) and abiotic factors (air temperature and relative humidity) of these species. A total of 25.33 hours of observations showed that T. semitaeniatus is clearly less sedentary in relation to T. hispidus, in terms of short-term movements. There was a tendency of smaller individuals to perform a greater number of displacement movements per minute, and displacement distance per minute increased in accordance with an increase in relative humidity for T. semitaeniatus. The movement pattern of the less sedentary T. semitaeniatus may reflect their greater dependence on rocky outcrops and, consequently, they demonstrate better morphological and behavioural adaptations. The surface area–volume relationship, which influences thermoregulatory behaviour, may explain the relationship between morphology and displacement distance in T. semitaeniatus. Furthermore, this species appears to control their movements with the aim of avoiding dehydration caused by restrictions of relative low humidity in their microhabitats. This study has important implications for future research on biomechanics, ecophysiology and modelling of the potential distribution of Tropiduridae lizards under climate change.
Acknowledgements
We thank colleagues of the Laboratório de Herpetologia da Universidade Federal de Campina Grande (LHUFCG), Rosimere Jerônimo de Lucena, Claudenice Arruda, Ingrid Gisely Henriques Nunes and Diego dos Santos Alves for the help in the field. We thank the owners of Sítio Angola for the availability of the study site. We are grateful to Daniel Cunha Passos for the enormous contribution in the entire construction of this manuscript. We also thank Solange Maria Kerpel and Pamella Bárbara Coutinho Soares for valuable considerations. We thank the local Ethics Committee – Comissão de Ética em Pesquisa, of the Universidade Federal de Campina Grande – for the licence granted to the project (Protocol CEP no. 064-2016). We thank the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPQ</#funding-source;temp>) for financial support through PIBIC/CNPq-UFCG valid 2016–2017 to the senior author.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).