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Acritoscincus duperreyi

Acritoscincus duperreyi

Superregnum: Eukaryota
Regnum: Animalia
Subregnum: Eumetazoa
Cladus: Bilateria
Cladus: Nephrozoa
Superphylum: Deuterostomia
Phylum: Chordata
Cladus: Craniata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Infraphylum: Gnathostomata
Superclassis: Tetrapoda
Cladus: Reptiliomorpha
Cladus: Amniota
Classis: Reptilia
Cladus: Eureptilia
Cladus: Romeriida
Subclassis: Diapsida
Cladus: Sauria
Infraclassis: Lepidosauromorpha
Superordo: Lepidosauria
Ordo: Squamata
Subordo: Scincomorpha
Superfamilia: Scincoidea

Familia: Scincidae
Subfamilia: Eugongylinae
Genus: Acritoscincus
Species: Acritoscincus duperreyi
Name

Acritoscincus duperreyi (Gray, 1838)
References
Links

Uetz, P. & Hallermann, J. 2021. Acritoscincus duperreyi. The Reptile Database. Accessed on 12 December 2019.
Shea, G., Cogger, H. & Greenlees, M. 2018. IUCN: Acritoscincus duperreyi (Least Concern). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018: e.T102964863A102964878. DOI: 10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-1.RLTS.T102964863A102964878.en

Vernacular names
English: Eastern Three-lined Skink

The eastern three-lined skink (Acritoscincus duperreyi ), also known as the bold-striped cool-skink, is a species of skink, a lizard in the family Scincidae. The species is endemic to Australia. A. duperreyi has been extensively studied in the context of understand the evolution of learning, viviparity in lizards, and temperature- and genetic-sex determination. A. duperreyi is classified as a species of least concern by the IUCN.[3]

Taxonomy

The species has also been placed in the genus Bassiana, with two other species of skink: B. trilineata and B. palynota.[4] Micro-genetic analyses have revealed that the genus Bassiana began to diversify during the Miocene, suggesting that these three lineages started to form between 16.2-9.7 million years ago. Individual species in the genus began to diversify as well through the Miocene and into the Early Pleistocene.[4] Within A. duperreyi, population-level diversification between the population on Tasmania, Kangaroo Island, and mainland Australia likely took place during the Upper Pliocene through the Early Pleistocene.[4] Genetic evidence suggests that there are seven distinct lineages of A. duperreyi: five on mainland Australia, one on Tasmania and Flinders Island, and another on Kangaroo Island.
Nomenclature

The eastern three-lined skink goes by many common names and has been referred to by multiple scientific names as well in past literature. Modern research refers to the skink as Bassiana duperreyi (Hutchinson et al 1990). However, in the past, the skink is also referred to as Acritoscincus duperreyi (Wells and Wellington, 1984, 1985), Tiliqua duperreyi (Gray 1838), Lygosoma duperreyi (Dumeril and Bribon 1839), Leiolopisma duperreyi (Greer 1982), Leiolopisma trilineatum (Greer 1982, Cogger 1983, Pengilley 1972), Pseudemoia duperreyi (Frank and Ramus 1985), Leiolopisma eulepis (Frank and Ramus 1985).[5] Common names include the eastern three-lined skink, the bold-striped cool-skink, or simply the three-lined skink.[3]
Etymology

The specific name, duperreyi, was given by British zoologist John Edward Gray, in order to honor French naval officer Louis Isidore Duperrey. Duperrey was known for his explorations of Australia and the New Guinea archipelago, where he collected various flora and fauna.[6]
Distribution & Habitat

A. duperreyi is found in south-eastern Australia (New South Wales, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria),[2] and several islands. The eastern three-lined skink has been found on Babel Island, Big Dog Island, Flinders Island, Little Dog Island, and Maria Island.[7]

A. duperreyi habitats include grasslands, wet-dry sclerophyll forests, temperate forests, temperate shrublands, human-developed pasturelands, and Alpine regions.[8][3][9] They are particularly abundant in cool climate regions of southeastern Australia.[10] Though they are abundant in high-elevation regions, A. duperreyi does not live at higher elevations than 1,650 meters.[11]
Description

A. duperreyi is strongly striped[12][13] and it has a characteristic pattern of stripes running down the length of its body.[7] Black or grey stripes usually run along the sides of its body, with a black stripe running down the spine as well.[7] A hatchling typically has bright red coloration on its throat, which fades to an orange-pink or disappears after a few weeks of life.[7][14] The skink has a comparatively small body size, ranging up to 80 millimeters in snout-tail length.[15] Hatchling Bassiana have relatively larger head sizes than adults.[10] Unlike most skinks, A. duperreyi has greater than 22 maxillary teeth.[9] However, like many other skinks, A. duperreyi has an autonomous tail that can easily break away from the rest of the body due to its unique musculature and caudal fracture plate.[16]

Pengilley (1972) distinguished three distinct populations of A. duperreyi based on appearance (Form A, B, and C). Form A can be distinguished from Form B based on its non-continuous dark vertebral stripe, and the rare occurrence of the upper light line in the middle of a scale row. The vertebral line of form C is also broken, however typically into spots as opposed to lines in form A. The lateral line in Form C is also typically absent. Form A has been associated with Southwestern Australia. Form B has been found in Barrington Tops, New South Wales, Flinders Island, Kangaroo Island, Tasmania, and South Wales. Form C has been found in New South Wales.[9]
Reproduction

A. duperreyi is oviparous, meaning that parents lay eggs from which young hatch.[12][13] Females lay eggs once a year in the early summer, with clutch sizes ranging between 3 and 9 eggs. Additionally, gravid females typically lay eggs at communal sites.[17] Typically, these communal sites are located in open areas, under logs, or under rocks.[18] Females prefer to lay eggs in sunny areas.[10] Nests are typically shallow compared to other reptile species.[19] In one study that assessed A. duperreyi nests over the course of eleven years, 64% of nests were found to be communal.[20] Nest-site availability varies significantly over time in the habitat of A. duperreyi; despite this, there is little temporal variation in communal nesting patterns.[20] Also, there is no significant temperature difference between solitary and communal nests.[20] Eggs raised in communal nests have lower water content than those raised in solitary nests, however hatchlings born from communal nests are larger in size. Communal hatchlings also had shorter tails and tended to run faster than solitary hatchlings.[20]
Hatchling development

The temperature of incubation and the elevation of the clutch can affect the development of offspring before and after hatching, as well as behavior throughout the skink's life. Females typically choose where to lay eggs based on the expected average temperature of incubation for their eggs. Experiments have shown that incubation temperatures significantly impact embryogenesis and therefore incubation time, as well as body size and behaviors of hatchlings.[18] Snout-vent length is significantly longer for hatchlings incubated at lower elevations.[11] Survival of eggs also increased at hotter incubation temperatures.[11] Prolonged incubation in cold environments delays hatching and reduces hatchling success.[11] Effects of incubation temperature also impact the sexes differently, contributing to the scientific understanding of temperature-dependent sex determination.[14] Despite the relationship between incubation temperature and offspring phenotype, Shine and Harlow (1997) found that gravid female duperreyi do not select nest sites to match the phenotypic norms of their offspring.[14] A study that varied thermal environments of eggs during incubation found that variable thermal regimes, rather than a continuously “hot” or “cold” incubation environment, increased the rate embryo development in A. duperreyi, as measured by an increase in embryonic heart rate.[21] Additionally, A. duperreyi hatchlings do not appear to acclimate their embryonic heart rates to their thermal incubation environment, possibly due to thermal variation at nest sites.[19] At the same mean temperature of incubation, temperature fluctuations rather than a stable regime allowed more embryonic development to take place per day.[21] Indeed, data on A. duperreyi nesting patterns suggests that females do lay eggs in areas with high temperature variance during the day.[18]

Studies understanding the effects of incubation temperature on hatchling phenotypes have been used to understand the evolution of viviparity, the birth of live young, in reptiles. Studies in A. duperreyi provide further evidence in favor of the “cold climate hypothesis.” Mimicking in-utero environments through the retention of eggs in high-temperature environments improved hatchling success and viability in cold-incubation eggs, along with increased time of egg retention.[11]
Sex determination and sex reversal

In some vertebrate species, sex is determined genetically, while in others, environmental factors such as temperature impact sex development. A. duperreyi is one of two species of lizard in which sex reversal is confirmed.[8] A. duperreyi has an XX/XY sex determination system. Incubation temperatures of below 20° Celsius causes the reversal of a genotypic female (XX) to a phenotypic male in experimental conditions.[22] Sex reversal of genotypic females into phenotypic males occurs in the wild, though at a low rate.[8] Appropriately, cool Alpine climates have the highest proportion of sex-reversed males, at 28% in one case.[8][22] It is unclear if these males are fertile.[8]

Additionally, it has been found that larger eggs produced female offspring regardless of incubation temperature.[23] Multiple hypotheses seek to explain this phenomenon. Larger female A. duperreyi produce more eggs, so there may be a selective advantage to conferring larger size to female offspring rather than male offspring.[23]
Stress and development

Simulations of stress-induced A. duperreyi embryos found that under high-stress conditions, growth rate of hatchlings was increased. Though non-significant, these high-stress simulating treatments resulted in a shifted sex ratio in hatchlings, favoring males.[24] Though the cited study used corticosteroids to simulate stress, another study found that steroid hormone levels (testosterone, estradiol, and dihydrotestosterone) in biopsied egg yolks did not differ significantly between eggs destined to become male or destined to become female.[25] The effects of maternal hormones on hatchling development are therefore unclear.
Behavior
Anti-predator defense

The eastern three-lined skink has been demonstrated to exhibit certain anti-predatory behaviors. Hatchlings have been found to suddenly stop running away from predators and face them while wiggling their tails in a vertical position.[17] It is hypothesized that such behavior grants the lizard a chance to escape while the predator is occupied, then seizes, the moving tail. A 2011 study confirmed that slower hatchlings were more likely to exhibit tail-waving behavior.[17] This weakens the pursuit-deterrent explanation of this behavior, which posits that anti-predator displays are a true reflection of an individual’s ability to escape.[26] This finding supports previous research that hypothesized tail-waving as a behavior that deflects predators towards an expendable body part.[26] Indeed, after waving its tail, hatchling A. duperreyi ran back towards the stimulated threat during these experiments, further strengthening the hypothesis that this behavior is designed to misdirect the attention of predators.[26] Hatching A. duperreyi may make the choice to tail-wave when they are sufficiently tired from escaping, as tail-waving behavior increased significantly as running distance increases. Males are also slightly more likely to exhibit this behavior than females. Phylogenetic analysis of studies among lizard families Iguanadae, Lacertidae, Scincidae, and Gekkonidae suggests that the deflection function of tail-waving behavior may be an ancestral trait, whereas the pursuit-deterrent function is derived.[26]
Basking

Incubation temperature has been linked to the degree of basking behavior in duperreyi hatchlings. Those hatched from eggs incubated at lower temperatures have shown to bask for longer periods of time following hatching.[17]
Learning

A. duperreyi hatchlings have been demonstrated to have the ability to learn to navigate mazes and visual discrimination tasks based on color.[27] Experimental manipulation of mazes demonstrated that hatchlings use visual color cues, rather than spatial cues, to locate colored cap-covered food within mazes.[27] Hatchlings incubated in warmer conditions were significantly better at learning to remove caps to access food, suggesting that incubation conditions may affect learning ability.[27] A 2012 study showed that the better learning ability of hot-incubated hatchlings was not related to body size or locomotor speed, strengthening the proposed connection between better learning and hotter incubation environments.[28] Indeed, a 2017 study found differences in forebrain development between cold-incubated and hot-incubated hatchlings. Greater neural density was found in the telencephalons of hot-incubated hatchlings, which is consistent with their apparent increase in learning ability.[29]
Communal nesting

Gravid A. duperreyi intentionally select to lay eggs in communal nesting sites. One study found that captive females chose to lay eggs in nesting sites that contain dummy eggs far more often than what a random-choice null hypothesis would suggest. While there is extensive theory about the benefits of communal nesting for reptiles, including easier nest excavation for females and socialization environments for hatchlings, such hypotheses have yet to be tested in A. duperreyi.[20] So far, the determined benefits of communal nesting are found to be increased hatchling size and running speed.[20]
Feeding behavior

Experiments have shown that A. duperreyi is more likely to flee from large rather than small prey, and are less likely to attack prey larger than their body size. However, in some of these trials, specimens did attack crickets larger than their own bodies. This skink modifies its method of attack according to the size of prey: large crickets were more likely to be seized by their head or legs first, while small crickets were attacked at the abdomen.[10] Attack success depended on the size of prey, with A. duperreyi being more successful when prey size was smaller. Because of this, less mass was gained in trials when A. duperreyi was enclosed with only the opportunity to feed on large prey. When prey size was greater than 30% of body mass, A. duperreyi lost mass over the course of the experiment. The energy and water expenditure of attempted attacks likely outweighs the gain of successfully feeding on larger prey.
Diet

A. duperreyi feeds on small invertebrates, namely insects.[30] Diets of similar species suggests that A. duperreyi is a foraging generalist.[31] Diet does not change significantly in either contents or prey size between juveniles and adults.[10]
Predation

Little is known about the predators of this species. Snakes and birds are likely common predators. In particular, the white-lipped snake, D. coronoides, occupies much of the range of A. duperreyi. [32]
Conservation

Forest fires are not uncommon in A. duperreyi habitats, though they do not typically spread. In January 2003, lightning strikes resulted in the onset and spread of forest fires in the Brindabella Range. Drought and hot temperatures led to the rapid spread of these fires. Shine, Brown, and Elphick (2016) used pre- and post- fire data collected over five years to understand the effect of forest fires on A. duperreyi nesting patterns. At one site, Piccadilly Circus, fires decimated nesting sites and the eggs within them. Eggs collected from Ginini Flats, though exposed to atypical incubation temperatures, did not see reduced hatchling success. Vegetation at Piccadilly Circus was seriously affected, and it took five years for vegetation to return to pre-fire conditions. Egg counts at Piccadilly Circus, though not the other sites, did fall after the fire. Egg counts returned to normal during the five-year study period. Maternal preference for laying eggs in open areas did protect A. duperreyi from some levels of overheating, so only the habitat most affected by the fire was seriously impacted. A. duperreyi can, though, recover from the impact of forest fires.[33]

The IUCN classifies A. duperreyi as being of 'least concern'.[3] Threats include residential and commercial development specifically, as well as threats that apply generally to all reptiles, such as habitat degradation due to introduced species and predation by cats, dogs, and pigs.[34][3]
Effect of Climate Change

A. duperreyi females have changed their nesting behavior potentially in response to increasing ambient temperature over the past decade. A 2009 study found an 1.5° Celsius average temperature increase within A. duperreyi nests over a decade. While females did dig deeper nests and laid eggs much earlier in the reproductive season, potentially accounting for these temperature increases, these changes in behavior were insufficient to reduce warming experienced by eggs late in the incubation period. Such changes can have drastic consequences on the phenotypes of offspring, as it has been demonstrated that incubation temperature has consequences on the size, locomotion speed, sex, and learning ability of A. duperreyi hatchlings.[35]
References

Shea, G., Cogger, H. & Greenlees, M. 2018. Acritoscincus duperreyi. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018: e.T102964863A102964878. https://doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-1.RLTS.T102964863A102964878.en. Downloaded on 24 April 2019.
Acritoscincus duperreyi at the Reptarium.cz Reptile Database. Accessed 24 April 2019.
Hal Cogger (GAA, GRA / Australian Museum; Glenn Shea (Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Sydney; Greenlees, Matt (2017-06-13). "IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: Acritoscincus duperreyi". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
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Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. (Bassiana duperreyi, p. 78).
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Telemeco, Rory S.; Elphick, Melanie J.; Shine, Richard (2009). "Nesting lizards (Bassiana duperreyi) compensate partly, but not completely, for climate change". Ecology. 90 (1): 17–22. doi:10.1890/08-1452.1. ISSN 1939-9170.

Further reading

Gray JE (1838). "Catalogue of the Slender-tongued Saurians, with Descriptions of many new Genera and Species". Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., [First Series ] 2: 287–293. (Tiliqua duperreyi, new species, p. 292).

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