1. 1.Effects of habitat on the thermal regime were investigated in two diurno—nocturnal geckos in Hawaii.
2. 2.In trees Hemidactylus frenatus thermoregulated in daytime with body temperature (BT) above air temperture (AT); in houses some thermoregulated likewise in daytime but mainly the species thermoregulated at night, on electric lamps, to the same BT as in trees by day.
3. 3.Lepidodactylus lugubris in trees thermoregulated in daytime, its BT lower than in H. frenatus. In the rocks it had at night a BT resembling that in trees in daytime, because the thermal cycle in rock crevices lagged behind outside AT.
4. 4.The flexibility of these geckos in thermal regime and activity cycle preadapts them to both migration and invasion of houses.
Author Keywords: Thermoregulation; thermal regime; diel activity cycle; body temperature; temperature regulation; Hemidactylus frenatus; Lepidodactylus lugubris; Gekkonidae; geckos; lizards; reptiles; Hawaii; migration; invasion of habitats; commensalism; lizards with man; activity; diurno—nocturnal; basking; rocks; thermal cycle; habitat, effects on thermoregulation; preadaptation 相似文献
There is increasing concern about the ecological effects of light pollution, as artificial lighting spreads with urban expansion. While artificial lighting can negatively affect some species, others use it in novel ways. In tropical and subtropical regions, artificial lighting has created a novel niche: the ‘night light’ niche. Geckos living as human commensals (house geckos) are apparently well adapted to occupy this niche. In an urban area in north‐eastern Australia, we found that the invasive Asian house gecko Hemidactylus frenatus (Gekkonidae) occupies a broader range of light environments in the field than does the native gecko Gehyra dubia (Gekkonidae). Experimental removal of the invasive species from a building indicated that it did not behaviourally influence the light environments chosen by the native species in the short term; they continued to use darker areas even after the invasive species was removed. In Y‐maze experiments, neither species showed a significant preference for light or dark areas; however, preliminary data suggest the invasive species was more willing to explore the Y‐maze than the native species. The willingness of H. frenatus to forage closer to lights, where insect abundance is typically higher, might account for its success as a global invader of human environments, even in areas where other gecko species are established. 相似文献
After being acclimatized to feeding on fruit flies, the Asian house gecko, Hemidactylus frenatus Duméril & Bibron (Gekkonidae:Squamata), consumed fewer methyl eugenol (ME) fed male fruit flies, Bactrocera papayae Drew & Hancock (Tephritidae: Diptera) than when offered ME-deprived males. After one-day exposure to only ME-fed males, the geckos avoided feeding on female flies when in the presence of ME-fed males. When mechanically disturbed, the ME-fed males spontaneously ejaculated a rectal secretion which contains phenyl propanoids that deter the predator.The ME-fed males also competed significantly better than normal (ME-deprived) males for virgin females. Male B. papayae converts ME to three other phenyl propanoids which act in concert as a sex pheromone to attract females during courtship and as an allomone to the gecko. 相似文献
Electron microscopy of the male phase of the ovotestis of Amphiprion frenatus , a protandric hermaphrodite, showed no connective tissue between male and female areas and, as the basal lamina was lacking both along the seminiferous tubules and round the previtellogenic oocytes, the male and female germ cells were only separated by their respective surrounding somatic cells (Sertoli and follicle cells). Besides previtellogenic oocytes, oocytes in meiotic prophase and very small (young) previtellogenic oocytes, were detected in the ovarian part, as spermatogenesis proceeded, revealing oogenetic activity. Degeneration of some previtellogenic oocytes and their follicle cells was discernible. 相似文献