Past, current and future states of Green Lizard (Lacerta viridis) populations in Eastern Europe
Résumé
Over the last decades, climate change and various anthropogenic pressures have been reported to
have greatest impacts on reptile populations worldwide. Moreover, thermophilic species such as
green lizard Lacerta viridis (Laurenti, 1768) are protected due to their dramatic population trends
specially in Eastern Europe (Appendix II of the Bern Convention, national Red Data Books, etc.).
Here we investigated the past, current and future states of this species in Eastern Europe. By
studying the morphology of both museum specimens from the 1960s (n = 50) and comparing with
modern populations (2012-2017, n=97), we noticed an increase in number of anomalies of head
folidosis in the most recent specimens (21.1%). Recent field censuses and observations in our field
sites throughout Ukraine also revealed an increase in the occurrence of rare or so-called abnormal
morphs - melanized forms, "meridionalis morphotype" (Odesa and Mykolaiv regions) and
“leopard morphotype” (Cherkasy region) , with visible signs of viral (Reoviridae) papillomas in
the populations of southern Ukraine. Finally, by implementing bioclimatic models based in GIS,
Maxent and Wordclim, we could predict a northward shift of the range of the species in Europe
up to the Baltic countries by 2050. Consistently, there is already almost a 2-fold decrease in the
number of populations in the south of its range (Black Sea region). All these records collected in
the recent decades indicate that green lizard populations require creation of local and international
conservation programs for the protection of the species.
Emys-R (https://emysr.cnrs.fr) is funded under the joint Biodiversa+ and Water JPI joint call for
research projects, under the BiodivRestore ERA-NET Cofund (GA N°101003777), with the EU
and the funding organisations Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR, France, grant ANR-21-
BIRE-0005), Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF, Germany, grant BMBF
16LW015), State Education Development Agency (VIAA, Latvia, grant ES RTD/2022/2), and
National Science Center (NSC, Poland, grant 2021/03/Y/NZ8/00101).
Domaines
Sciences du Vivant [q-bio]
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