Lj. Vitt et Pa. Zani, ORGANIZATION OF A TAXONOMICALLY DIVERSE LIZARD ASSEMBLAGE IN AMAZONIAN ECUADOR, Canadian journal of zoology, 74(7), 1996, pp. 1313-1335
Of 22 lizard species studied in eastern Ecuador, 21 were diurnal. Ten
were active foragers and 12 were sit-and-wait foragers. Considerable v
ariation existed in habitat and microhabitat distribution and body tem
peratures among species. Body size varied over an order of magnitude (
20-270 mm snout-vent length). Most morphological (size-free) variation
among species (77%) was accounted for by two principal component axes
and appears tied to phylogeny. Prey size was correlated with lizard s
ize and species were separated by prey size. Low overlaps in microhabi
tat, habitat, and prey type also separated species. Pseudocommunity an
alysis indicated structure in the consumer-resource matrix. In some co
mparisons, prey overlaps among species were greater within than betwee
n higher taxa, and closely related species tended to be found in simil
ar habitat patches and microhabitats, suggesting that resource-use pat
terns are determined to some extent by phylogeny. Ecology, morphology,
and phylogeny appear tied together in a complex manner, with resource
partitioning contributing to maintenance of structure. Historical int
eractions among closely related species may have been important in det
ermining which species within particular clades invaded and persisted
within local assemblages in lowland forest.