Native lizards may have a powerful, very tiny, secret weapon when it comes to resisting invasion by invasive species — parasites.
While the parasites can impact the health of the native populations, they also help keep invasive populations in check. Christian Cox, an evolutionary physiologist at FIU and researcher in the Institute of Environment, led a study to examine what happened when tropical lizards were introduced to new areas. The research team's study allowed invasion to play out in real-time. They found parasites can be a great equalizer between native and invasive species. Areas with native lizards serve as a kind of parasite reservoir, helping curb the spread of newly introduced species.
When invasive lizards were temporarily relocated to an area that didn't have any native lizards, the scientists observed the parasites from the invasive lizards eventually disappeared. This gives them a potential advantage for a more successful invasion.
As study co-author Michael Logan from the University of Nevada points out, it's often very difficult to study the earliest stages of invasion. It can take many years before scientists observe invasive species in an area.
The researchers recreated an invasion scenario on uninhabited islands in the middle of the Panama Canal. They caught about 200 Panamanian slender anoles from the mainland and examined them for a parasitic mite that clings to the anole's body like a tiny transparent bubble. The team then took a boat ride across Lake Gatún and the Panama Canal to several small islands where they set the lizards free and tracked them. Two of the islands did not have any existing anoles. One island had native Gaige's anoles, a competitor species for the Panamanian slender anole.