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Behavioral Ecology Vol. 10 No. 2: 136-140
© 1999 International Society for Behavioral Ecology

Olfactory discrimination in scat-piling lizards

C. Michael Bull, Clare L. Griffin and Gregory R. Johnston

School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, South Australia 5001

Address correspondence to C. M. Bull. E-mail: michael.bull{at}cc. flinders.edu.au

Several lizard species in the Australian scincid genus Egernia have been reported to deposit scats in piles. We show that E. striolata, which does produce scat piles, and E. inornata, which does not, can both discriminate their own secretions, on paper substrates, from those of unfamiliar conspecifics. This was indicated by elevated tongue flick rates and more time in contact with the unfamiliar stimulus. This was not just a response to a novel stimulus because the secretions from another species (E. stokesii) elicited lower responses. When scats were presented, only striolata demonstrated discrimination between their own scats and those of unfamiliar conspecifics. This suggests that scats could be used to produce individual signals, perhaps indicating residence status, in scat-piling species. For striolata the signal from scats became less effective as the scats became older, suggesting the need to pile scats to renew the signal.

Key words: communication, Egernia, lizards, recognition, scats, skinks.


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