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Journal ArticleDOI

Habitat use and ecological interactions of an introduced and a native species of Anolis lizard on Grand Cayman, with a review of the outcomes of anole introductions

TLDR
Review of data concerning 23 Anolis introductions indicates that the presence or absence of an ecologically similar native species may be an important determinant of colonization success or failure.
Abstract
Since its introduction ten years ago, Anolis sagrei has spread over much of Grand Cayman and is now more common in some habitats than the native anole, A. conspersus. Interspecific differences in body size, perch height, and microclimatic preference may have facilitated the colonization. Nonetheless, competition may be occurring between the species; comparisons with studies of habitat use prior to the arrival of A. sagrei indicate that in open habitats, where A. sagrei is now abundant, A. conspersus perches higher, but in closed habitats, where A. sagrei is absent, no change in perch height is evident. Review of data concerning 23 Anolis introductions indicates that the presence or absence of an ecologically similar native species may be an important determinant of colonization success or failure.

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Citations
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The global decline of reptiles, deja’ vu amphibians

TL;DR: Public attitudes about the need for conservation of reptiles are probably linked to concern about amphibian declines and deformities, and counts of “officially” recognized endangered and threatened species are likely to grossly underestimate the actual number of imperiled s pecies.
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Genetic variation increases during biological invasion by a Cuban lizard

TL;DR: It is shown that one key to invasion success may be the occurrence of multiple introductions that transform among- population variation in native ranges to within-population variation in introduced areas.
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Ecological and community‐wide character displacement: the next generation

TL;DR: Character displacement research in the past two decades provides sound statistical support for the hypothesis in a wide variety of taxa, albeit with a phylogenetically skewed representation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

What Is Resource Partitioning

TL;DR: The concept of resource partitioning, as originally developed, relates to evolutionary change in species in response to selection pressures generated by interspecific competition but has taken on another meaning, one that is not defined in terms of evolutionary function, and which refers simply to differences in resource use between species regardless of the origins of the differences.
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Communities as assembled structures: Do rules govern pattern?

TL;DR: A survey of the assembly process at the community level can be found in this paper, where the authors examine whether there are mechanics to community assembly that provide the foundation for a general theory of organization at community level.
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Niche width: biogeographic patterns among anolis lizard populations

TL;DR: One aspect of the niche width of a population refers to the variety of resources used by the entire population, which may be measured by the variance of the population's resource-utilization function.
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The Evolution of Convergent Structure in Caribbean Anolis Communities

TL;DR: Historical and ecological studies must be integrated to understand why communities are structured as they are, and examples from Caribbean Anolis assemblages indicate the unique ecological insight a historical perspective can provide.
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The Ecology of Colonization as Seen in the Zoogeography of Anoline Lizards on Small Islands.

TL;DR: One group of lizards-the iguanid genus Anolis in the West Indies-is now sufficiently well known to permit an empirical test of ecological theories of colonization in terms of these relatively slowly colonizing forms, and investigation of one special aspect leads to the following conclusions.