Most community ecology studies involving anoles focus on interactions between anole species. This is not surprising, because in the Caribbean, anoles are extraordinarily abundant and most of their ecological interactions are, indeed, with other anoles. Less studied are interactions with other taxa, the exception being predator-prey interactions, such as those with curly-tailed lizards (discussed many times in these pages, most recently here).
One widespread group of lizards are skinks, the most species rich family of lizards. There are few reports of anole-skink interactions, probably in large part due to the fact that skink diversity in the Caribbean is relatively low, and many species have been extirpated by human agents. However, anoles have been introduced to places around the world where skinks are more abundant, and some reports of interactions have been made. For example, in the Ogasawara Islands of Japan, A. carolinensis has reached high population densities and has been implicated in the decline of the native skink.
Gerrut Norval has been studying the introduced populations of A. sagrei in Taiwan. He now reports an observation of a somewhat odd interaction between a brown anole and a skink in which the anole fell to the ground from a utility pole and then was quickly chased back up the pole by an elegant skink, Plesiodon elegans. Given the relative size of the two lizards, attempted predation was probably not the cause. Gerrut speculates that this is an example of interspecific territoriality, transcending lizard family lines.
In Taiwan, A. sagrei reaches high population densities (as it does just about everywhere it occurs)–possibly cause for alarm for the native herpetofauna. Norval also mentions some intriguing preliminary observations: A. sagrei seems to attain smaller sizes at sites where it co-occurs with other lizard species. Interesting! Hopefully, we’ll hear more from Gerrut soon on this provocative possibility.
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Gerrut Norval
The elegant skink is fairly aggressive, and I have observed even hatchlings chasing each other, but obviously with less aggression than the adult males do.
In the eastern part of Taiwan, the brown anole also has to contend with the Chinese skink (Plestiodon chinensis, formerly Eumeces chinensis). They are even more aggressive, and slightly bigger than the brown anole and the elegant skink, and they are saurophagous! We have not made any observations yet, but I am quite confident that it is only a matter of time, before there will be something to write about them as well.