Creatures courageous and cowardly
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ELISABETH M. BROWN
We expect wildlife to flee when we approach. When instead an animal
stands its ground, it’s something unusual that demands attention. We
wonder if it is sick, or maybe hostile and about to attack. What’s
going on?
On my walk to work I pass small lizards sunning themselves on a
concrete path. Usually they zip away into nearby shrubs as I
approach, but recently I noticed, among this year’s crop of tiny
ones, two that stand their ground.
Why are they out there in the first place? Lizards need to warm up
in the sun so they can successfully hunt insects. Anyone who has
tried to catch a grasshopper or swat a fly knows you have to be fast.
For the lizards, staying out in the sun means a higher body
temperature, faster muscle response, and better luck hunting their
insect prey.
The downside of staying out in the sun is that they might
themselves be prey -- to crows, roadrunners, snakes, house cats or
small boys. It’s a balancing act, a game with high stakes.
Wildlife with no fear of humans is usually restricted to
uninhabited islands.
European sailors visiting the Galapagos islands noted in their
journals that the animals there -- giant tortoises, large swimming
lizards and various birds, had no fear of humans and did not flee.
The sailors found this to be a great boon, and slaughtered them for
food. The lizards tasted bad, so they concentrated on the giant
tortoises, hunting them to extinction on some islands.
Island fauna in general have no fear of humans because they have
no experience with us. A predatory bird in the sky they notice, but a
large, upright animal doesn’t push their panic button. It would be a
waste of time and energy for an animal to give up what it’s doing and
run away from something that poses no danger.
On the mainland, however, the dangers are many and real and
include humans.
The smart lizard takes few chances; it’s better to be hungry than
risk being eaten.
In every generation, some lizards are born (hatched, actually)
less timid than the rest; in coastal Orange County these are usually
eliminated before reaching adulthood. What I have been seeing in the
tiny lizards is the natural variation in the range of behaviors
before natural selection weeds out the foolish, courageous ones.
If there were no predators, lizards that bask in the sun longer
would catch more insects, be more successful, and leave more
descendants. Thus the “courageous” trait would spread in the lizard
population. Over time, more and more lizards would stand their ground
when danger approached. But in our predator-filled environment, it’s
the cowardly lizards that survive long enough to reproduce.
I don’t mean to imply from this that lizards can’t change their
behavior from experience. Even tropical fish in an aquarium figure
out where the food comes from, and when it’s likely to appear.
Lizards also have some limited capacity to learn from their
experiences, but some of them, the bold ones especially, don’t
survive that first encounter with danger.
* ELISABETH BROWN is a biologist and the president of Laguna
Greenbelt Inc.
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