Data from: From anecdote to evidence: experimental validation of fire-cue recognition in Australian sleepy lizards
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https://datadryad.org/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.15dv41p6z
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Fire has shaped the evolution of both plants and animals. Animals exposed
to fire throughout their evolutionary history are predicted to exhibit
behavioural adaptations that enhance survival during fire. Here, we
investigated whether Australian sleepy lizards (Tiliqua rugosa), a large
skink from fire-prone regions, recognise and respond to cues of fire.
Motivated by reports of captive sleepy lizards reacting to smoke, we
conducted behavioural trials exposing wild-caught sleepy lizards to the
chemosensory (smoke) and auditory (fire sounds) cues of fire. Behavioural
analysis revealed that sleepy lizards exhibited increased activity and
significantly greater movements in response to smoke than to water vapour.
They did not, however, react aversively to auditory cues of fire,
suggesting a reliance on chemosensory rather than auditory cues for fire
detection. Our findings provide empirical support for the hypothesis that
chemosensory cues of fire elicit escape responses in animals from
fire-prone regions, suggesting an evolved, likely innate, behavioural
adaptation to recognise and respond to fire cues as indicative of a
threat. As climate change increases the frequency and intensity of
wildfires, understanding how animals perceive and respond to fire will
prove crucial for predicting the threat posed by a more fire-prone future.
提供机构:
Dryad
创建时间:
2026-05-08



