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Foraging mode affects extinction risk of snakes and lizards, but in different ways
Meiri, ShaiSchool of Zoology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel
Author
Shine, RichardSchool of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Author
Abstract
What factors render a species more vulnerable to extinction? In reptiles, foraging mode is a fundamental ecological dimension: some species actively search for immobile prey, whereas others ambush mobile prey. Foraging mode is linked to diet, morphology, movement ecology, and reproductive output, and hence plausibly might affect vulnerability to threatening processes. Our analyses of data on 1543 taxa revealed links between foraging mode and (IUCN) conservation status, but in opposite directions in the two main squamate groups. Ambush-foraging snakes were more threatened and with declining populations than were active searchers, whereas lizards showed the reverse pattern. This divergence may be linked to differing consequences of foraging mode for feeding rates and reproductive frequency in snakes versus lizards. Our findings underscore the need for taxon-specific conservation management, particularly in groups such as reptiles that have been neglected in global conservation prioritization.
Baeckens, S., Meiri, S., & Shine, R. (2023). Foraging mode affects extinction risk of snakes and lizards, but in different ways. Conservation Letters, 16(5), 1-7. https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12977 (Original work published 2023)