Community ecology of African reptiles: historical perspective and a meta-analysis using null models

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Community ecology of African reptiles: historical perspective and a meta-analysis using null models Luca Luiselli* F.I.Z.V. (Ecology) and Centre of Environmental Studies DEMETRA s.r.l., Via Olona 7, I-00198 Rome, Italy Abstract Community ecology and resource-partitioning patterns of African reptiles have been increasingly studied over the past 30 years. In this paper, I review these studies and provide a meta-analysis based on null models and Monte Carlo simulations (RA2 and RA3 algorithms) to compare patterns of resource partitioning among reptiles in tropical versus nontropical Africa. In general, studies on community ecology of African reptiles have had a strong impact on the global study of resource-partitioning patterns in ectotherms, with such authors as Robert Barbault and Eric Pianka being among the most famous having ever worked in Africa. Despite previous claims, in this paper I suggest that there is no true evidence that reptile biomass is depressed in tropical Africa in comparison with tropical regions of other continents. My null-model reanalysis of 32 independent study systems (twenty from tropical Africa and twelve from nontropical Africa) shows that resourcepartitioning patterns are nearly always found in tropical assemblages of reptiles, although this cannot be said for nontropical assemblages of species. Microhabitat (especially for lizards) and food (especially for snakes) are the resource axes typically partitioned by African reptiles. Key words: Africa, community ecology, history of ecology, niche partitioning, null models, reptiles Résumé *Correspondence: E-mail: lucamlu@tin.it Le schéma de l écologie communautaire et du partage des ressources des reptiles africains ont été de plus en plus étudiés au cours des 30 dernières années. Dans cet article, je passe ces études en revue et je donne une méta-analyse basée sur des modèles nuls et des simulations de Monte Carlo (algorithmes RA2 et RA3) pour comparer le schéma du partage des ressources chez les reptiles d Afrique tropicale à celui des reptiles d Afrique nontropicale. En général, l étude de l écologie communautaire des reptiles africains a eu un fort impact sur l étude mondiale des schémas de partage des ressources chez les exothermes, et des auteurs comme Robert Barbault et Eric Pianka comptent parmi les plus célèbres de ceux qui ont travaillé en Afrique. Malgré des assertions antérieures, dans cet article, je suggère qu il n y a pas de preuve certaine que la biomasse des reptiles soit en déclin en Afrique tropicale en comparaison avec les régions tropicales des autres continents. Ma nouvelle analyse de 32 systèmes d étude indépendants (20 d Afrique tropicale et 12 d Afrique nontropicale) montre que les schémas de partage des ressources se retrouvent presque toujours dans les assemblages de reptiles tropicaux, ce qui n est pas le cas des assemblages d espèces nontropicales. Le micro-habitat (spécialement pour les lézards) et la nourriture (spécialement pour les serpents) sont les axes de ressources typiquement partagés par les reptiles africains. Introduction In many aspects of science and technology, including the natural sciences, Africa is considered the neglected continent, due certainly to the endemic problems that have afflicted the development of African countries, including, for example, diffuse poverty, strong economic constraints on research investments, unsafe social and political conditions, and the negative effects of the colonial period. In addition, the whole African continent has been often forgotten in the general reviews on ecological topics although some valuable studies were available, and although Africa is nowadays becoming to be more present in the international scientific scenario in terms of economic investment to scientific research (e.g. Nigeria, see Nature News 2006) and number and quality of scientific papers produced. In this paper, I review the history and development of community ecology studies on African reptiles, and by 384

African reptile community ecology 385 performing a meta-analysis of published datasets in independent studies (using null models procedures, see Gotelli & Graves, 1996) also examine what has been learnt about the structure and functioning of reptile communities with these studies. I demonstrate that historically, Africa has played a central role in herpetological community ecology studies, and that the current studies are being still contributing much to our understanding of reptilian community rules. An historical perspective Reptiles, especially lizards, have been popular as study models for community ecology since the 1960s and the 1970s, because certain features of their biology (for instance, their ectothermic physiology accomplished with enormously diverse morphologies, physiologies and lifehistories) make them appropriate for examining community structure in a matrix of similarities and differences that may allow for generalizations of the results obtained to all groups of animals (e.g. Schoener, 1974; Toft, 1985). In this context, African communities of reptiles have not been marginal for the development and testing of ecological theory. For instance, one of the most relevant papers of the 1970s compared the reptile biomass by continents, and concluded that the biomass of reptile communities in Africa is much depressed, probably due to the impact of large herbivores (Janzen, 1976). This study has influenced lot of later papers, and will be discussed below. The first authoritative review of community ecology in amphibians and reptiles was written by Toft (1985). She reviewed a total of 88 studies published worldwide, and focused her paper on 43 quantitative studies, mostly of them on lizards and amphibian larvae because, at that time, these organisms were the most popular models in community ecology research. Out of these 43 studies, only two (Inger & Marx, 1961; Poynton & Pritchard, 1976) were relative to African communities, but none of reptiles. The absence of African reptile papers reviewed by Toft (1985) may suggest that studies on African reptilian communities were scarce and peripheral to the general stream of community ecology research, but indeed this was just the outcome of an unsatisfying bibliographic search oriented mainly towards articles written in English. Indeed, since the early 1970s African journals were already publishing small papers of interest for reptile community ecologists (e.g. Broadley, 1974; Western, 1974) and, especially, Robert Barbault published a long series of crucial articles, mostly written in French, on the community ecology of lizards and snakes in Ivory Coast (Barbault, 1971, 1974a,b, 1975, 1976a,b, 1977; just to cite a few). These papers constitute certainly one of the most authoritative series of papers in reptilian community ecology, and likely still present the most complete dataset on the functioning of a specific community of tropical reptiles in the world (see also Scott & Campbell, 1982). Contextually to Barbault s studies in tropical Africa, other authors investigated reptilian community structure in North Africa (Grenot & Vernet, 1972a,b; Vernet & Grenot, 1972a,b), and Pianka published some of his highly cited papers on desert lizards of southern Africa (e.g. Pianka, 1971; Huey et al., 1974; Huey & Pianka, 1977; Huey, Pianka & Homan, 1977; Pianka & Huey, 1978). Thus, although overlooked by Toft (1985), there is no doubt that studies on African herpetofaunas were central for the development of community ecology theory yet since the 1970s. The following decades have seen the publication of further papers by Barbault (e.g. in 1991) and Pianka (e.g. in 1986), where niche theory was examined in much detail, and a series of other contributions from both tropical and nontropical regions (e.g. Hughes, 1983; Nouira, 1983, 1988; Simbotwe, 1984). From the theoretical point of view, the most interesting aspect of the long series of papers cited above is that they followed directly the development and shifts in ecological thought: for instance, whereas papers published in the 1970s were focused on the role of interspecific competition that was thought to be central in shaping the herpetofaunal communities, more recent papers by the same authors included alternative explanations for community structure, including, for example, physiological performance, extrinsic constraints, feedback relationships and indirect relationships among coexisting species, and their deep evolutionary history (e.g. Barbault, 1991). In the 1990s and 2000s, the studies on African reptile communities shifted in emphasis in part as a consequence of (i) the increased importance of conservation biology in general and (ii) the dramatic conservation status of several important African environments. Thus, many community studies were poorly oriented in terms of ecological theory, but became strongly focused on conservation matters. This shift in scientific emphasis is clearly seen not only in lots of papers on Malagasy herpetofaunas (e.g. Raxworthy & Nussbaum, 1994), but also in other studies on fragile habitats in coastal Ghana (Raxworthy & Attuquayefio, 2000) and in the oil-rich forest zone of Nigeria (Akani

386 Luca Luiselli et al., 1999; Luiselli, Akani & Politano, 2006). Nonetheless, several studies have been still being published on aspects of community ecology theory applied to reptiles, and newer study subjects and study regions entered into the scene. In particular, novel study subjects included a variety of issues, for instance the community ecology of sympatric (i) tortoises in arid Zimbabwe (e.g. Hailey & Coulson, 1995; Hailey, Coulson & Chidavaenzi, 1997; Hailey, Coulson & Mwabvu, 2001) and in wet Nigerian forests (e.g. Luiselli, 2003a, 2005, 2006a); (ii) saxicolous lizards in Zimbabwe (Howard & Hailey, 1999); (iii) lizards in Kenya (Wahungu, Mumia & Nzau, 2004; Hardy & Crnkovic, 2006); (iv) small lacertids in northern Africa (Znari et al., 2000; Rouag et al., 2007); (v) chameleons in central and West Africa rainforests (Hofer, Bersier & Borcard, 1999; Hofer, Baur & Bersier, 2003; Luiselli, 2007); (vi) rainforest geckos in Nigeria (Luiselli, Eniang & Akani, 2007; Rugiero et al., 2007); and (vii) snakes from rainforests, mangroves, and derived savannahs in Nigeria (see Luiselli, 2006b, and references therein). All this bulk of studies allow us to have a new, more general look on how communities of reptiles are structured in the African continent. Basics of resource partitioning General theory establishes that in living communities the strength of interspecific competition is not equally intense at all climates and latitudes, being generally stronger in tropical than in nontropical climates (Pianka, 1966; Rohde, 1992). In addition, interspecific competition is more intense when the coexisting species are characterized by high density populations, i.e. it is stronger at high biomass levels of competitors (Pianka, 1986). Thus, since biomass is entirely relevant for having competition effects in a living community, and since in Africa it has been supposed that reptilian biomass is depressed (Janzen, 1976), a first key question should be: is African reptile biomass really depressed? When interspecific competition is strong, the sympatric species tend to partition the available resources to minimize competition effects (e.g. Schoener, 1974; Roughgarden, 1976, 1983). Resource partitioning patterns may derive from the interaction of some categories of causes, including predation, extrinsic and intrinsic constraints on an organism s performance, and interspecific competition (e.g. see Toft, 1985; Barbault, 1991; Barbault & Stearns, 1991), but in general nonrandom patterns of resource partitioning are associated to communities shaped by interspecific competition (Gotelli & Graves, 1996). These predictions have been widely confirmed by studies on sympatric snakes (Luiselli, 2006b), and are therefore probably valid for other ectotherms as well. So, we may infer that competition is somewhat important in shaping the African reptile communities if most of the studied communities show nonrandom resource partitioning patterns. Based on the theory, we may predict that reptilian communities from tropical Africa will exhibit nonrandom resource partitioning patterns more frequently than those from nontropical Africa, because of the supposed higher strength of interspecific competition. Thus, the second key question will be: are reptile communities from tropical Africa more likely to partition the available resources than those from nontropical Africa? These key questions will be examined in the following text. Is African reptile biomass really depressed? After Janzen s (1976) study, the issue of a depressed biomass in tropical African reptile communities has never been examined in detail by later authors, nonetheless it has been widely accepted and frequently cited. I suggest that this pattern is not widely supported by data, although admit that more research is certainly due to this crucial argument. My reasons for being unsatisfied with Janzen s argument are as follows: 1 Large herbivores should have had a very different impact in savannahs versus forests because their abundance is much different among these macro-habitats, so reptilian biomass should be much more depressed in savannahs than in forests. This is because in African tropical forests, mammalian biomass is low, while species diversity is high, compared to more open, savannah tropical habitats (Robinson & Bennett, 2000; Barnes, 2002). African rainforests have, in general, poor soils and high annual mean rainfall and are not as productive as other habitats to support a large mammalian biomass, so habitat type seems very relevant here. 2 There are some zones and habitat types where the density of snake species (even of a large size) is certainly impressively high (Phelps, 1989; Luiselli, 2006c; Akani et al., unpublished data). 3 Reptilian biomass seems to be less in pristine remote habitats than in altered forests and farmbush habitats (Madsen et al., unpublished data). Moreover, the available data on biomass comparisons among different areas are certainly ambiguous. For

African reptile community ecology 387 instance, the biomass of forest floor herpetofauna of Kibale Forest, Uganda (data in Vonesh, 1998) was much less than that of Lac Tissongo and Lombé rainforests, Cameroon (data in Scott, 1982) or Costa Rican rainforests (Scott, 1976), but similar to that of rainforests in Borneo (Lloyd, Inger & King, 1968) and Thailand (Inger & Colwell, 1977), thus showing that generalizations are hardly true or at least still unsupported by unambiguous field evidence. Therefore, for the future it will be necessary to study in much detail the issue of depressed reptile biomass in Africa to verify the generality of Janzen s (1976) statement and to establish exactly which consequences this factor may have for the African ecological systems. For this moment, I preliminarily suggest that reptile biomasses in Africa are not particularly depressed in a variety (most?) of habitats throughout the continent, and therefore that this factor may have not affected remarkably the functioning of African communities of reptiles. Are communities from tropical Africa more likely to partition the available resources than those from nontropical Africa? If reptile biomass in African habitats is not depressed as previously suggested (Janzen, 1976), there is no reason for thinking that the main organization forces governing African assemblages of species are strongly different from those operating elsewhere. Thus, it is predictable that resource partitioning patterns should be more clearly visible in tropical than in nontropical reptile communities as a consequence of an increased competition in tropical climates (Pianka, 1966; Rohde, 1992). I tested this hypothesis by performing a meta-analysis on reptile communities in tropical versus nontropical Africa (Table 1). Meta-analysis methods I used for this meta-analysis only studies, published in peer-reviewed international journals or in university dissertations, that (i) explicitly tested resource partitioning and interspecific competition hypotheses in African reptile communities and or that (ii) provided data-sets fully re-analysable by statistical procedures (see below). Therefore, I excluded from analysis several studies that, although interesting and data-rich, investigated aspects of community structure different from resource partitioning and competition (e.g. Raxworthy & Attuquayefio, 2000, etc.). As done in earlier reviews (e.g. Toft, 1985), I included in the analysis both studies considering all important resource dimensions (i.e. habitat, food and time, see Pianka, 1986) and those deliberately selecting certain dimensions although others may be important. Datasets were inspected to find nonrandom structure of the various communities along four resource dimensions: macro-habitat, micro-habitat, food and time. To evaluate whether each community was structured randomly or not, I contrasted the actual data matrix as given in the original literature source with random pseudo-communities generated by Monte Carlo simulations (Gotelli & Graves, 1996). I used the EcoSim software (Aquired Intelligence Corp., Kesey-Bear, VT, USA) to calculate overlap indices and to generate Monte Carlo simulations. I parameterized resource items data as presence versus absences. As too many zeroes in the matrices might distort the error levels while too often reject structure, I fixed zeroes prior to any analyses. This was also justified by the fact that the different sizes of the species within each community (e.g. Luiselli, Akani & Capizzi, 1998) may justify a fixing of zeroes (Pianka, 1986). Pianka s (1986) overlap formula was calculated for all communities, and the original species utilization matrices were randomized by shuffling the original values among the resource states. I used two randomization algorithms (RA2 and RA3) of Lawlor (1980), as they are particularly robust for niche overlap studies (Gotelli & Graves, 1996). RA2 tests for structure in the generalist specialist nature of the resource utilization matrix by conserving guild structure, but destroying observed niche breadth (Gotelli & Graves, 1996). RA3 tests for guild structure by conserving niche breadth for each species, but destroying guild structure manifested by the zero structure of the resource utilization matrix (Gotelli & Graves, 1996). For each pair of species, 3 10 4 random Monte Carlo permutations were generated. This number of permutations is enough to avoid algorithm biases in calculations (Lehsten & Harmand, 2006). Niche overlap values were calculated for each of these randomly generated matrices, and species-pair and community-summary statistics were computed (Friggens & Brown, 2005). Actual overlap values were then compared to the distributions of the expected values. Structure was assumed when P obs<exp = 0.05 or less in at least one niche dimensions, either with RA2 or RA3 (Gotelli & Graves, 1996). In all cases, equiprobable resource use was a priori assumed in the analyses, unless the studies reviewed explicitly reported resource availability data.

388 Luca Luiselli Table 1 Summary of the studies that dealt with resource partitioning in African reptile communities Species Country Resource axes tested Resource axes partitioned References Tropical Africa Freshwater turtles Freshwater turtles Nigeria (unpolluted river) Nigeria (oil-polluted river) Zimbabwe Tortoises (Geochelone pardalis, Kinixys spekii) Tortoises (Kinixys erosa, Kinixys homeana) Varanus ornatus, Osteolaemus tetraspis Terrestrial lizards Cameroon (altitude) Luiselli et al., 2004, 2006; Luiselli & Akani, 2003 None Luiselli et al., 2004, 2006; Luiselli & Akani, 2003 Hailey & Coulson, 1995 Nigeria Diet Luiselli, 2003a, 2005, time Nigeria diet None Luiselli et al., 1999 (altitude) Hofer et al., 1999 Terrestrial lizards Kenya Diet Diet Hardy & Crnkovic, 2006 Terrestrial lizards Ivory Coast Microhabitat, time Barbault, 1987, diet, time Terrestrial scincid lizards Ivory Coast Time Time Barbault, 1991 Terrestrial scincid lizards Kenya Microhabitat Wahungu et al., 2004 Terrestrial lizards Nigeria Diet Akani et al., 2002, time Chameleons Cameroon Hofer et al., 2003, (altitude) (altitude) Chameleons Nigeria, Microhabitat, diet Luiselli, 2007 Cameroon Terrestrial lizards Zimbabwe Macrohabitat Howard & Hailey, 1999 Savanna snakes Ivory Coast Diet Diet Barbault, 1977 Rainforest snakes Nigeria Diet Luiselli et al., 1998 Cobras Nigeria, time Macrohabitat Microhabitat Luiselli & Angelici, 2000; Luiselli et al., 2002 Marsh snakes Nigeria Diet Luiselli, 2003b (Natriciteres), time Water snakes Nigeria, time Diet Luiselli et al., 2005; Luiselli, 2006c Vipers (Bitis) Nigeria Diet Luiselli, 2006d,e Nontropical Africa Fossorial lizards (Thyphlosaurus) Namibia Morphology, macrohabitat, Morphology, diet Huey et al., 1974 Agama lizards Namibia Diet None Heideman, 2002

African reptile community ecology 389 Table 1 (Continued) Species Country Resource axes tested Resource axes partitioned References Terrestrial lizards Morocco Diet Diet Carretero et al., 2006 Terrestrial lizards South Africa Microhabitat, Jacobsen, 1982, time time Terrestrial lizards (Sphenops, Egypt Thermal Attum et al., 2007 Scincus, Chalcides), thermal Terrestrial scincid lizards Namibia Microhabitat, Huey & Pianka, 1977 (Mabuya), time time Terrestrial scincid lizards Namibia Diet None Castanzo & Bauer, 1998 (Mabuya) Terrestrial lizards Algeria None Rouag, 1999; Rouag & Benyacoub, 2006 Terrestrial lacertid lizards Algeria Diet None Rouag et al., 2007 Terrestrial lacertid lizards Morocco None Znari et al., 2000 Terrestrial lizards Tunisia Diet None Nouira, 1983 Amphisbaenians South Africa Diet None Webb et al., 2000 Pertinent references are given for each study, together with country, resource axes tested in the original article, and resource axes that proved effectively to be partitioned by species (after my re-analysis with RA2 and RA3 algorithms, see the text for more details). References are listed by nontropical versus tropical regions, and then alphabetically. However, before presenting the results of my metaanalysis, it is necessary to note the potential problems associated with this type of analysis. First of all, it is well known that in too small matrices Poisson errors might obscure possible structures. I checked this with a highly structured simulated matrix with five species and two resources, and EcoSim was unable to find this structure at the 5% error level. Thus, it is possible that some such cases may have occurred in my analysis. The use of standard software and standard algorithms, despite their wide use in previous literature and their previous tests of robustness (Gotelli & Graves, 1996), may have some inherent problems associated to the different structure of the various datasets. Differences in data quality among studies may be potential sources of type II error rates; however, this is an aspect that is nearly impossible to take into account in these comparative studies, where the reviewer is forced to consider all studies as nearly equivalent in terms of data quality. In any case, I used the same level of resource identification for all studies, and this should have much reduced the risk of biases coming from different data quality among studies. Last but not least, structure has a temporal dimension (Gotelli & Graves, 1996). Data obtained over longer time periods give averaged values and might obscure short turn dietary differences. Thus, it is clear that the differences in the duration of the various studies may have introduced unpredictable biases in the results. However, also in this case only a very few studies on African reptile community ecology have been conducted over long time (for instance, Barbault s studies in Ivory Coast), thus it is likely that for most cases this has not been a problem with my synthesis. Results Overall, I reanalysed data from 32 independent communities of African reptiles, twenty of them coming from tropical regions and twelve from Northern Africa or Southern Africa ( nontropical Africa in the following text) (Table 1). All the main groups of reptiles were included in these examples, as well some of the main habitat types (savanna, rainforest, desert, Mediterranean), however, there was a clear bias towards lizards and snakes. This bias obviously reflected the higher interest that these two groups have attracted to community ecologists worldwide, and not only in Africa (e.g. Pianka, 1986; Luiselli, 2006b). Overall, the percentage of studies demonstrating a nonrandom partitioning of the available resources was

390 Luca Luiselli very different between tropical versus nontropical Africa (90% of those in tropical Africa and 41.7% of those in nontropical Africa). Among the few exceptions to the rule of a nonrandom structure in tropical Africa communities, one study area in tropical Africa was severely polluted by oil spills and the community structure of freshwater turtles there was therefore supposed to be affected by habitat devastations and also by consequent prey species decline (Luiselli et al., 2006), thus the above-mentioned percentage was even to be taken on the conservative side. The lesser percentage of studies showing nonrandom resource partitioning in nontropical than in tropical zones is probably linked to the increase of competition intensity in tropical areas, but nonetheless other reasons can be invoked since resource partitioning patterns may be caused by additional reasons other than competition (Toft, 1985; Barbault, 1991). In general, however, I may conclude that African studies on reptile communities confirm the expectation that tropical organisms are more likely to partition the available resources than organisms from nontropical zones. Habitat (especially micro-habitat) and diet were the two resources most commonly partitioned by sympatric reptiles, with a preponderance of the niche for lizards and of food niche for snakes (Table 1). However, these aspects of niche partitioning in lizards and snakes were already well established in previous reviews (Toft, 1985; Luiselli, 2006b), and thus do not need further examination in the present article. It is also to be stressed that the extent of competition depends also on climatic fluctuations. Extreme climates may keep reptiles populations under the carrying capacity of the system, then preventing exploitative competition because (trophic) resources are not limited (e.g. see Luiselli, 2006b). This is one of the reasons because temperate and nontropical communities of reptiles may be less often nonrandomly organized, i.e. less competitive. Similarly, reptiles occupying higher trophic levels (i.e. snakes versus lizards or tortoises) should be more prone to competition because predators do not reduce their populations under the carrying capacity (Luiselli, 2006a,b). Effects of seasonality (dry versus wet seasons) on resource partitioning patterns The seasonality (dry versus wet seasons) is certainly one of the crucial aspects of tropical climate, with a welldemonstrated widespread ecological impact on the life of organisms (e.g. Hopkins, 1974; Bourliere, 1983; Osunobi & Fasehun, 1987; Otieno, Kinyamario & Omenda, 2001). In Afrotropical reptiles, for instance, the various species may exhibit a strong reproductive seasonality even being active the year-round (Barbault, 1976a; Luiselli, Angelici & Akani, 2000). At the ecosystem level, the more general pattern associated with tropical climate is a tremendous peak of productivity during the wet season, and a particularly depressed biomass at the basal trophic chain levels during the dry months (Bourliere, 1983). If resource partitioning patterns are due primarily to the needs of minimizing interspecific competition, and if competition is more intense when the resource is limited, than it can be supposed that interspecific competition and, as a consequence, resource partitioning should be particularly well-seen during the dry season, when the biomass productivity is depressed (e.g. Bourliere, 1983). Despite this general prediction may be easy to test and particularly interesting in general ecological terms, the great majority of African reptile community studies did not examine this issue. However, in one of the few studies dealing with the above issue, Luiselli (2006c) demonstrated a significant effect of dry season food resource shortage on the intensification process of interspecific competition between two sympatric water snakes (Grayia smithii and Afronatrix anoscopus). Indeed, the availability of the major prey types for water snakes (amphibians and fish) increased significantly during the wet season (Luiselli, 2006c), as predicted by the fact that the huge nutrient input occurring during flood pulses supports large numbers of invertebrates, fish, and amphibians, that in turn serve as the base for these highly productive ecosystems (Ostfeld & Keesing, 2000). Both snake species consumed the various prey types in relation to their seasonal availability in the environment, and, hence, they can be considered as opportunists. Although both species were opportunist predators that foraged mainly in relation to prey availability, they partitioned the limited food resource during the dry season by foraging on prey organisms of similar type but of very different size, whereas they fed on prey of similar size and type during the wet season months. This suggests that increased competition may result in an adjustment of prey-size preferences in relation to the relative abundance of food. Future studies There is still much that we should learn concerning community ecology of reptiles in Africa. However, my review shows that Africa is not at all a neglected continent

African reptile community ecology 391 as for reptilian community ecology studies, and that we have already learnt quite a lot. For the future, we need to collect data from more study cases, and especially from (i) subterranean fossorial reptile guilds that are still largely unknown at the present time and (ii) sympatric crocodilians in central African forests. It will also be important to emphasize study systems where the effects of seasonality (dry versus wet seasons) can be tested in tropical reptile communities. I predict that this may be a very fertile field for exciting discoveries in the field of tropical herpetology. I would also suggest using an experimental approach (for instance, removal experiments) to study the effects of interspecific competition on shaping community structure, and to establish whether interspecific competition is really the main force responsible for the widespread occurrence of resource partitioning patterns. Barbault (1975) pioneered this kind of research in Africa by studying growth rates in Mabuya skinks fed ad libitum in experimental enclosures, and comparing their growth with that of freeranging individuals. As their growth rates did not differ from conspecifics in natural conditions, he concluded that food was likely not a limiting resource in his study area (Lamto savanna, Ivory Coast). Semi-experimental approaches were also applied in other studies (Huey et al., 1974; Luiselli, 2003b). Huey et al. (1974) found character displacement in fossorial viviparous skinks by comparing sympatric populations (Typhlosaurus lineatus and Typhlosaurus gariepensis) and allopatric populations (T. lineatus). These authors observed that sympatric lineatus were larger than allopatric lineatus, these differences being linked to the needs of reducing food niche overlap with T. gariepensis. Luiselli (2003b) used a similar approach for examining the food habits of marsh snakes. He analysed sympatric populations (Natriciteres fuliginoides and Natriciteres variegata) and allopatric populations (N. fuliginoides), and concluded that competition was certainly important given that fuliginoides, in sympatry with variegata, shifted considerably towards eating (i) many invertebrates from a diet based on many small vertebrates; (ii) many terrestrial organisms from a diet based on many aquatic organisms; and (iii) relatively larger prey from a diet based on smaller prey. These approaches may reveal so much about the community functioning of African reptiles and definitely deserve much attention in the years to come. Finally, African reptile communities may be useful study systems for testing interesting but yet speculative ideas, for example, that guild structure may foster diversity by means of competitive mutualisms arising from the indirect effects between species belonging to different guilds (Pianka, 1980; Spellerberg, 1982). 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