Cm. Bull, POPULATION ECOLOGY OF THE SLEEPY LIZARD, TILIQUA-RUGOSA, AT MT-MARY, SOUTH-AUSTRALIA, Australian journal of ecology, 20(3), 1995, pp. 393-402
A population of the sleepy lizard, Tiliqua rugosa, near Mt Mary, South
Australia, was surveyed by random encounter captures along 42 km of t
ransects over a 10 year period from 1982 to 1991. population size, est
imated by the Jolly-Seber method, was lowest (724 adults) following th
e 1982/1983 drought, but then increased to a plateau (1500-1600 adults
) which was maintained for 5 years. Densities in each 1 km segment of
the transects varied from 0.3 to 5.5 lizards per hectare. Adjacent seg
ments of the transects varied more than two-fold in lizard numbers, an
d those differences were consistent over time. Over all years, an esti
mated 16% of juveniles survived their first year, 42% of those survive
d a second year, and 62% of those survived a third year. By the third
year some juveniles had reached adult size, although others took more
than 5 years to mature. The annual survival of adults of all ages was
80-90%, whereas only 4% of juveniles reached adulthood. Cars killed an
average of 3% of the adult population each year, and were a major sou
rce of mortality. To sustain stable populations adults must live 20-50
years. This long-lived species has a population structure governed by
low recruitment, but long survival of established adults. It differs
from the rapid turnover dynamics reported for many other lizard specie
s.