The ecology of the nocturnal black shore skink, Leiolopisma suteri, was studied on a boulder beach at Cable Bay, Motutapu Island, for 19 months. Distributions over a stable beach (Motutapu Island) and an exposed beach (Cuvier Island) were compared, and the effects of storms on the Cable Bay population were noted. Density, aggression, thermal preference, feeding, and fat reserve fluctuations were also studied. The L. suteri population at Cable Bay has, in favourable areas, one of the highest densities (13/m2) recorded for a lizard species. Spatial distribution of this population varies between the different age classes: adults congregate in the most stable areas, whereas hatchlings are commonest in the least stable areas. Storms cause changes in the beach structure and in the spatial limits of the population.
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Ecology of the black shore skink, Leiolopisma suteri (Lacertilia: Scincidae), in boulder beach habitats
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