Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/2023
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Type: Journal article
Title: Use of burrows by the endangered pygmy blue-tongue lizard, Tiliqua adelaidensis (Scincidae)
Author: Milne, T.
Bull, C.
Hutchinson, M.
Citation: Wildlife Research, 2003; 30(5):523-528
Publisher: C S I R O Publishing
Issue Date: 2003
ISSN: 1035-3712
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Tim Milne, C. Michael Bull and Mark N. Hutchinson
Abstract: <jats:p>The pygmy blue-tongue lizard, Tiliqua adelaidensis, had been considered extinct until its recent rediscovery near Burra in the mid-north of South Australia. The lizards apparently rely on spider burrows with a single entrance as refuge sites. In this paper we describe observations from all-day video recordings of the entrances of burrows occupied by lizards on 31 days across the spring and early summer of 1996. The lizards spent most of each day either retreated down the burrow or basking at the burrow entrance. Early in the season, when temperatures were cooler, lizards spent more of each day basking, and more of their basking time fully emerged from the burrow, than later in the season. Results are consistent with the hypothesis that the lizards thermoregulate by moving in and out of the burrow. Lizards also fed by making short excursions from the burrow, often to catch passing invertebrate prey, although they also fed on flowers early in spring. Later in the season lizards were more likely to vacate their burrows for longer times, or to move away from their burrows, and mating activity was observed when males approached burrows occupied by females. The observations suggest that pygmy blue-tongue lizards rely heavily on burrows for many activities, and that any conservation management scheme for this endangered species will rely on maintaining an adequate supply of burrows.</jats:p>
Rights: © CSIRO 2003
DOI: 10.1071/WR02087
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr02087
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 2
Earth and Environmental Sciences publications
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