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of the real lizards, family Lacertidae
Podarcis pityusensis Illa Negra de Llevant (pityusensis x maluquerorom)
Berg, M.P. van den & Zawadzki, M. & Kroniger, M. (2014) -
This is our fourth report in a series on our whereabouts while collecting data for a future revision of the present subspecific order of the endemic Balearic sisterspecies Podarcis lilfordi (GÜNTHER, 1874) and Podarcis pityusensis (BOSCÁ, 1883), which data are stored in our free accessible database at www.pityusensis.nl (VAN DEN BERG & ZAWADZKI 2011 ; VAN DEN BERG et al. 2013 ; VAN DEN BERG et al. 2014). During this trip from the 22nd of May untill the 6th of June 2014, we were able to collect data on various mainland Ibiza locations, as well as the following adjacent islands; Tagomago, Dau Gran, Negra Llevant, Bosc de Conillera, Conillera, Espartar, S’Espardell de S’Espartar, and Escui de S’Espartar. We also visited Escui de Cala d’Hort, and can confirm this rock is without lizards. We also introduce a simplified representation of the ventral coloration as a possible determining key.
Böhme, W. & Eisentraut, M. (1981) -
Es wird über einen 1930 angesetzten Versuch berichtet, bei dem auf einem bis dahin eidechsenfreien Felseiland (Dado Grande bei Ibiza, Pityusen) Männchen einer melanistischen und Weibchen einer grünen Inselpopulation von Podarcis pityusensis ausgesetzt wurden. Die Untersuchung von sechs fünf Jahre später gefangenen Tieren ergibt, dass die Vermischung zu erhöhter Variabilität und gesteigertem Größenwuchs geführt hat. Eine erneute Kontrolle dieses noch vorläufigen Ergebnisses wird angeregt.
Boscá, E. (1883) -
Cirer, A.M. (1981) -
Cirer, A.M. (1987) -
EL ESTUDIO ABORDADO EN LA TESIS VERSA SOBRE LA CARACTERIZACION TAXONOMICA DE LA LAGARTIJA DE LAS PITIUSAS PODARCIS PITVUSENSIS. SE ANALIZAN LAS DISTINTAS POBLACIONES DESDE TRES ASPECTOS DISTINTOS: EL ANALISISBIOMETRICO EL ANALISIS ELECTROFORETICO DE DISTINTAS PROTEINAS Y EL ANALISIS COLORIMETRICO. LOS ANALISIS ESTADISTICOS APLICADOS SOBRE LAS VARIANTES BIOMETRICAS DEMUESTRAN LA EXISTENCIA DE DIVERSOS GRUPOS DE POBLACIONES MUY SEMEJANTES ENTRE SI. LA VARIABILIDAD DE LA ESPECIE NO SOLO ES FENOTIPICA SINO QUE TAMBIEN ES GENETICA DETECTANDOSE UNA DIVERSIDAD EN ESTOS CARACTERES SUPERIOR A LA ESPERADA EN REPTILES. SE OBSERVA UNA ALTA HETEROSIS QUE ES CARACTERISTICA DE LA ESPECIE LO QUE PARECE DEMOSTRAR QUE ESTA SE ENCUENTRA EN LAS PRIMERAS FASES DE COLONIZACIONY ADAPTACION A LOS DIFERENTES HABITATS OFRECEN LAS ISLAS QUE OCUPA. SE CONSTATA LA ACCION DEL EFECTO FUNDADOR Y LA DERIVA GENETICA EN LOS TRES ASPECTOS CONSIDERADOS EN LA TESIS ASI COMO UNA TENDENCIA EVOLUTIVA HACIA EL AUMENTO DE TAMAÑO SIEMPRE QUE NO EXISTA UNA PRESION SELECTIVA CONTRARIA. SUCEDE LO MISMO CON EL MELANISMO. CONSIDERANDO EL ESTADO EVOLUTIVO ACTUAL DE LA ESPECIE REFLEJADO EN LA PLASTICIDAD DE LAS DISTINTAS POBLACIONES DE ESTALAARTIJA Y EN LA ADAPTACION QUE MANIFIESTAN EN CADA NICHO CONCRETO ASI COMO EL CONCEPTO RESTRICTIVO ACTUAL DE SUBESPECIE LA AUTORA CONSIDERA QUE SOLO PUEDEN CONSIDERARSE SEIS TAXONES SUBESPECIFICOS O SUBESPECIES DE LA LAGARTIJA DE LAS PITIUSAS.
Eisentraut, M. (1930) -
Eisentraut, M. (1949) -
Martínez-Rica, J.P. & Cirer, A.M. (1982) -
The status of the populations of Podarcis pityusensis on about 70 islets and small islands around Ibiza and Formentera (Balearic Islands) is examined, using data from our own observations, and, to a lesser amount, other publications. Lizard populations were found on 43 islets, but data are lacking for another 13. Only 10 sites (18 %) have abundant and well-maintained populations. In 13 localities (23%), there is no geographic isolation between the populations, or this isolation is very poor and incomplete. The high probability of populations mixing, or actual observation of this mixing, in 19 islands (34%) is indicated. Human pressure on lizard populations is strong in 14 cases (25 %). And finally, 18 populations (about one third) may be considered highly endangered or already extinct by elimination or genetic mixing with other populations. Among the subspecies which became extinct through mixing are P.p. miguelensis, P.p. subformenterae, P.p. algae, P.p. sabinae and P.p. grueni. The need for adequate protective measures aimed at the conservation of the remaining populations is emphasized.
Meyer, W. (1951) -
Pérez-Mellado, V. & Pérez-Cembranos, A. & Rodríguez, V. & Buadxes, J.M. & Brown, R.P. & Böhme, W. & Terrasa, B. & Castro, J.A. & Picornell, A. & Ramon, C. (2017) -
The Ibizan wall lizard, Podarcis pityusensis, was the subject of several documented translocations by the German vertebrate zoologist Martin Eisentraut, in 1930. He aimed to initiate long-term experiments into the evolution of melanism and other morphological traits and accordingly he designed introductions into five islets that (he believed) contained no lizards. In this study, we analyzed the genetic and morphological characteristics of individuals we found there. We found no lizards on two of the islets, namely Escull de Tramuntana and Galera, but for the first time, detected a large population on a third islet, Es Vaixell. Eisentraut founded the Es Vaixell population with nonmelanistic Ibizan specimens, but the present day population of Es Vaixell was found to be fully melanistic. Genetic markers support a strong similarity between Es Vaixell and its neighbour islet, Na Gorra, and indicate that, in all likelihood, the individuals introduced by Eisentraut have left no descendants. It is likely that Es Vaixell already contained lizards prior to this introduction. Analyses of microsatellite DNA placed individuals from a fourth islet, Dau Gran, with those of one of its source islet, Escull Vermell. They are also morphologically close to individuals from Escull Vermell. This suggests that selection pressures could have favoured the Escull Vermell phenotype following introduction. For reasons we discuss, the translocations have revealed less than Eisentraut would have originally hoped for. Although evolutionary processes are normally time-consuming, these translocations do provide some potential insights into the rapid evolution of lizard morphology following colonization.
Rodriguez, V. & Brown, R.P. & Terrasa, B. & Pérez-Mellado, V. & Castro, J.A. & Picornell, A. & Ramon, M.M. (2013) -
Two monophyletic sister species of wall lizards inhabit the two main groups of Balearic Islands: Podarcis lilfordi from islets and small islands around Mallorca and Menorca and Podarcis pityusensis from Ibiza, Formentera and associated islets. Genetic diversity within the endangered P. lilfordi has been well characterized, but P. pityusensis has not been studied in depth. Here, 2430 bp of mtDNA and 15 microsatellite loci were analysed from P. pityusensis populations from across its natural range. Two main genetic groupings were identified, although geographical structuring differed slightly between the mtDNA and the nuclear loci. In general, individuals from islets/islands adjacent to the main island of Ibiza were genetically distinct from those from Formentera and the associated Freus islands for both mtDNA and the nuclear loci. However, most individuals from the island of Ibiza were grouped with neighbouring islets/islands for nuclear loci, but with Formentera and Freus islands for the mitochondrial locus. A time-calibrated Bayesian tree was constructed for the principal mitochondrial lineages within the Balearics, using the multispecies coalescent model, and provided statistical support for divergence of the two main P. pityusensis lineages 0.111–0.295 Ma. This suggests a mid-late Pleistocene intraspecific divergence, compared with an early Pleistocene divergence in P. lilfordi, and postdates some major increases in sea level between 0.4 and 0.6 Ma, which may have flooded Formentera. The program IMa2 provided a posterior divergence time of 0.089–0.221 Ma, which was similar to the multispecies coalescent tree estimate. More significantly, it indicated low but asymmetric effective gene copy migration rates, with higher migration from Formentera to Ibiza populations. Our findings suggest that much of the present-day diversity may have originated from a late Pleistocene colonization of one island group from the other, followed by allopatric divergence of these populations. Subsequent gene flow between these insular groups seems likely to be explained by recent human introductions. Two evolutionary significant units can be defined for P. pityusensis but these units would need to exclude the populations that have been the subjects of recent admixture.
Salvador, A. (1984) -
Salvador, A. (2006) -
Viada Sauleda, C. (2021) -
Zawadzki, M. & Berg, M. van den & Kroniger, M. (2023) -
In the spring of 193o, the German zoologist Martin Eisentraut performed some field experiments with the Ibiza wall lizard Podarcis pityusensis (Boscá, 1883). When he found out that the small rocky island of Illa Negra de Llevant, located at the entrance to the port of Ibiza Town and close to the coast, seemed to have no lizard population of its own, he released a total of 5o specimens of the melanistic subspecies Podarcis pityusensis maluquerorum from the island of Bleda Plana. Although, these translocation experiments were published by Eisentraut (193o, 1949), they were obviously not known to all subsequent authors, and so the lizards encountered on the Illa Negra de Llevant in the period from 1979 onwards were always assigned to the nominate form Podarcis pityusensis pityusensis due to their similarity to the lizards of Ibiza. Previous investigations could not clarify whether the lizards of the Illa Negra de Llevant are descendants of the animals released by Eisentraut or whether they are specimens of a new introduction. With the results of our own investigations, we would like to contribute to solve the mystery of the lizards of the Illa Negra de Llevant.