Feeding habits, sexual dimorphism and size at maturity of the lizard Cnemidophorus ocellifer (Spix, 1825) (Teiidae) in a reforested restinga habitat in northeastern Brazil

The feeding habits, the sexual dimorphism in size and sexual maturity of the actively foraging lizard Cnemidophorusocellifer were analysed in an area of a reforested Restinga habitat located in the municipality of Mataraca, along the northern-most coast of Paraíba State, Brazil. Seventy-five specimens of C. ocellifer were examined (46 males and 29Â females). Of this total, only 23 specimens had prey in their stomachs. The most frequent prey consumed items were orthopterans (50%), coleopterans (23.9%) and arachnids (10.9%); termites and insect larvae were less consumed (both with 2.2%). There were no significant differences observed between the numbers of prey consumed by either males or females. There were significant differences in SVL (snout-vent length) between the sexes, with males attaining larger SVL values. When the influence of SVL was removed from the analyses, sexual dimorphism in the form was still reflected in the head size of these lizards. Sexual maturity in females and males was attained with SVL of 42.2 and 49.0 mm respectively. Although no significant difference was observed between the SVL of the females and the number of eggs produced, there was a clear tendency for larger females to produce more eggs. The low structural complexity of the vegetation and the poor soil quality in the reforested restinga area examined does not furnish favourable habitat for insect and termite larvae, contributing to the marked differences in the diet of the population of C. ocellifer observed in the present study in relation to the diet of their conspecifics in undisturbed areas of restinga, cerrado and caatinga.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Santana,GG., Vasconcellos,A., Gadelha,YEA., Vieira,WLS., Almeida,WO., Nóbrega,RP., Alves,RRN.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Instituto Internacional de Ecologia 2010
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842010000200025
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id oai:scielo:S1519-69842010000200025
record_format ojs
spelling oai:scielo:S1519-698420100002000252010-06-14Feeding habits, sexual dimorphism and size at maturity of the lizard Cnemidophorus ocellifer (Spix, 1825) (Teiidae) in a reforested restinga habitat in northeastern BrazilSantana,GG.Vasconcellos,A.Gadelha,YEA.Vieira,WLS.Almeida,WO.Nóbrega,RP.Alves,RRN. diet lizards sexual dimorphism in form clutch size Atlantic Forest The feeding habits, the sexual dimorphism in size and sexual maturity of the actively foraging lizard Cnemidophorusocellifer were analysed in an area of a reforested Restinga habitat located in the municipality of Mataraca, along the northern-most coast of Paraíba State, Brazil. Seventy-five specimens of C. ocellifer were examined (46 males and 29Â females). Of this total, only 23 specimens had prey in their stomachs. The most frequent prey consumed items were orthopterans (50%), coleopterans (23.9%) and arachnids (10.9%); termites and insect larvae were less consumed (both with 2.2%). There were no significant differences observed between the numbers of prey consumed by either males or females. There were significant differences in SVL (snout-vent length) between the sexes, with males attaining larger SVL values. When the influence of SVL was removed from the analyses, sexual dimorphism in the form was still reflected in the head size of these lizards. Sexual maturity in females and males was attained with SVL of 42.2 and 49.0 mm respectively. Although no significant difference was observed between the SVL of the females and the number of eggs produced, there was a clear tendency for larger females to produce more eggs. The low structural complexity of the vegetation and the poor soil quality in the reforested restinga area examined does not furnish favourable habitat for insect and termite larvae, contributing to the marked differences in the diet of the population of C. ocellifer observed in the present study in relation to the diet of their conspecifics in undisturbed areas of restinga, cerrado and caatinga.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessInstituto Internacional de EcologiaBrazilian Journal of Biology v.70 n.2 20102010-05-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842010000200025en10.1590/S1519-69842010005000006
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Santana,GG.
Vasconcellos,A.
Gadelha,YEA.
Vieira,WLS.
Almeida,WO.
Nóbrega,RP.
Alves,RRN.
spellingShingle Santana,GG.
Vasconcellos,A.
Gadelha,YEA.
Vieira,WLS.
Almeida,WO.
Nóbrega,RP.
Alves,RRN.
Feeding habits, sexual dimorphism and size at maturity of the lizard Cnemidophorus ocellifer (Spix, 1825) (Teiidae) in a reforested restinga habitat in northeastern Brazil
author_facet Santana,GG.
Vasconcellos,A.
Gadelha,YEA.
Vieira,WLS.
Almeida,WO.
Nóbrega,RP.
Alves,RRN.
author_sort Santana,GG.
title Feeding habits, sexual dimorphism and size at maturity of the lizard Cnemidophorus ocellifer (Spix, 1825) (Teiidae) in a reforested restinga habitat in northeastern Brazil
title_short Feeding habits, sexual dimorphism and size at maturity of the lizard Cnemidophorus ocellifer (Spix, 1825) (Teiidae) in a reforested restinga habitat in northeastern Brazil
title_full Feeding habits, sexual dimorphism and size at maturity of the lizard Cnemidophorus ocellifer (Spix, 1825) (Teiidae) in a reforested restinga habitat in northeastern Brazil
title_fullStr Feeding habits, sexual dimorphism and size at maturity of the lizard Cnemidophorus ocellifer (Spix, 1825) (Teiidae) in a reforested restinga habitat in northeastern Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Feeding habits, sexual dimorphism and size at maturity of the lizard Cnemidophorus ocellifer (Spix, 1825) (Teiidae) in a reforested restinga habitat in northeastern Brazil
title_sort feeding habits, sexual dimorphism and size at maturity of the lizard cnemidophorus ocellifer (spix, 1825) (teiidae) in a reforested restinga habitat in northeastern brazil
description The feeding habits, the sexual dimorphism in size and sexual maturity of the actively foraging lizard Cnemidophorusocellifer were analysed in an area of a reforested Restinga habitat located in the municipality of Mataraca, along the northern-most coast of Paraíba State, Brazil. Seventy-five specimens of C. ocellifer were examined (46 males and 29Â females). Of this total, only 23 specimens had prey in their stomachs. The most frequent prey consumed items were orthopterans (50%), coleopterans (23.9%) and arachnids (10.9%); termites and insect larvae were less consumed (both with 2.2%). There were no significant differences observed between the numbers of prey consumed by either males or females. There were significant differences in SVL (snout-vent length) between the sexes, with males attaining larger SVL values. When the influence of SVL was removed from the analyses, sexual dimorphism in the form was still reflected in the head size of these lizards. Sexual maturity in females and males was attained with SVL of 42.2 and 49.0 mm respectively. Although no significant difference was observed between the SVL of the females and the number of eggs produced, there was a clear tendency for larger females to produce more eggs. The low structural complexity of the vegetation and the poor soil quality in the reforested restinga area examined does not furnish favourable habitat for insect and termite larvae, contributing to the marked differences in the diet of the population of C. ocellifer observed in the present study in relation to the diet of their conspecifics in undisturbed areas of restinga, cerrado and caatinga.
publisher Instituto Internacional de Ecologia
publishDate 2010
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842010000200025
work_keys_str_mv AT santanagg feedinghabitssexualdimorphismandsizeatmaturityofthelizardcnemidophorusocelliferspix1825teiidaeinareforestedrestingahabitatinnortheasternbrazil
AT vasconcellosa feedinghabitssexualdimorphismandsizeatmaturityofthelizardcnemidophorusocelliferspix1825teiidaeinareforestedrestingahabitatinnortheasternbrazil
AT gadelhayea feedinghabitssexualdimorphismandsizeatmaturityofthelizardcnemidophorusocelliferspix1825teiidaeinareforestedrestingahabitatinnortheasternbrazil
AT vieirawls feedinghabitssexualdimorphismandsizeatmaturityofthelizardcnemidophorusocelliferspix1825teiidaeinareforestedrestingahabitatinnortheasternbrazil
AT almeidawo feedinghabitssexualdimorphismandsizeatmaturityofthelizardcnemidophorusocelliferspix1825teiidaeinareforestedrestingahabitatinnortheasternbrazil
AT nobregarp feedinghabitssexualdimorphismandsizeatmaturityofthelizardcnemidophorusocelliferspix1825teiidaeinareforestedrestingahabitatinnortheasternbrazil
AT alvesrrn feedinghabitssexualdimorphismandsizeatmaturityofthelizardcnemidophorusocelliferspix1825teiidaeinareforestedrestingahabitatinnortheasternbrazil
_version_ 1756426469003755520