From a press release from Villanova University, more worry. I don’t know about the researchers experiences, but my property is overrun with the Western Fence Lizard. I can hardly avoid stepping on them there are so many around the house. Personally, I don’t understand the linkage between warmer temperatures and lizard extinction as I’ve yet to see a lizard who didn’t want to warm itself up in direct sunshine or on heat radiating rocks/concrete/asphalt.
Maybe the researchers never saw the story about Iguanas dying and falling out of trees due to cold this past winter. Anyway, I’ll sure miss Godzilla.
Study documents widespread extinction of lizard populations due to climate change
International team of biologists, including Villanova University’s Dr. Aaron Bauer, find alarming pattern of population extinctions attributable to rising temperatures.
An international team of biologists has found an alarming pattern of population extinctions attributable to rising temperatures. If current trends continue, up to 20 percent of all lizard species are predicted to go extinct by 2080. The study was published in the May 14th issue of Science.
The researchers, led by Barry Sinervo, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, conducted a major survey of lizard populations worldwide, studied the effects of rising temperatures on lizards, and used their findings to develop a predictive model of extinction risk. Their model accurately predicted specific locations on five continents (North and South America, Europe, Africa, and Australia) where previously studied lizard populations have already gone locally extinct. Based on the predicted probabilities of local extinction, the probability of species extinction was estimated to be 6 percent by 2050 and 20 percent by 2080. As the ongoing extinction of populations is directly related to climate change, limiting the carbon dioxide production that is driving global warming is crucial for avoiding the wave of lizard extinction in future.
“We did a lot of work on the ground to validate the model and show that the extinctions are the result of climate change,” Sinervo said. “None of these are due to habitat loss. These sites are not disturbed in any way, and most of them are in national parks or other protected areas.” While recent global extinctions of amphibians are not directly related to climate change, but largely due to the spread of disease, the ongoing extinctions of lizards are due to climate warming from 1975 to the present.
The disappearance of lizard populations was first recognized in France and then in Mexico, where 12 percent of the local populations had gone extinct since the lizards had previously been studied. Although the lizards normally bask in the sun to warm up, higher temperatures exceeding their physiological limits keep them in the shade, restricting their activity and preventing them from foraging for food. The researchers used these findings to develop a model of extinction risk based on maximum air temperatures, the physiologically active body temperature of each species, and the hours in which its activity would be restricted by temperature. The model accurately predicted the disappearance of Mexican lizards and was then extended globally to lizards in 34 different families on five continents and validated by comparing the predicted results with actual local extinctions.
Data for African lizards was provided by Villanova University professor Aaron Bauer, whose research focuses on the evolution of geckos and other reptiles in the Southern Hemisphere. Bauer, who is the Gerald M. Lemole M.D. Endowed Chair of Integrative Biology, has worked in southern Africa for more than 20 years and has described more than 100 new species of lizards from around the world. Although the predicted extinction risk for the African lizards studied was low, neighboring Madagascar can expect to lose many species and extensive local extinctions have already been documented. “In many parts of the world, lizards are almost certainly going extinct due to climate change before their very existence is known to biologists” said Bauer, whose research is funded by the National Science Foundation.
Bauer believes that most Americans, particularly those in the northeast, where there are few – often inconspicuous – lizard species, are unaware of their ecological importance. However, the disappearance of lizard populations is likely to have repercussions up and down the food chain. Lizards are important prey for many birds, snakes, and other animals, and they are important predators of insects.
The climate projections used to model extinction risks assume a continuation of current trends in carbon dioxide emissions from human activities. Many of the extinctions projected for 2080 could be avoided if global efforts to reduce emissions are successful, but it may be too late to avoid the losses predicted for 2050.
Funding for this study came from grants from the National Geographic Society, National Science Foundation, and a diversity of international funding bodies.
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In fairness, a second press release, from AAAS about the same subject issued minutes after the Villanova release at least has some supporting data imagery. See below.
In fact, there was a group of rapid fire press releases withing minutes that hit Eurekalert:

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As global temperatures rise, the world’s lizards are disappearing
20 percent of all lizard species could be extinct by 2080, researchers say
This press release is available in Chinese, Japanese, Spanish, French, Portuguese and Finnish. Surveying Sceloporus lizard populations in Mexico, an international research team has found that rising temperatures have driven 12 percent of the country’s lizard populations to extinction. An extinction model based on this discovery also forecasts a grim future for these ecologically important critters, predicting that a full 20 percent of all lizard species could be extinct by the year 2080.
The detailed surveys of lizard populations in Mexico, collected from 200 different sites, indicate that the temperatures in those regions have changed too rapidly for the lizards to keep pace. It seems that all types of lizards are far more susceptible to climate-warming extinction than previously thought because many species are already living right at the edge of their thermal limits, especially at low elevation and low latitude range limits.

Caption: Global maps of observed local extinctions in 2009, and projections for 2050 and 2080 based on geographic distributions of lizard families of the world.
Although the researchers’ prediction for 2080 could change if humans are able to slow global climate warming, it does appear that lizards have crossed a threshold for extinctions—and that their sharp decline will continue for decades at least.of California in Santa Cruz, along with colleagues from across the globe, reached these conclusions after comparing their field studies of the lizards in Mexico with extensive data from around the world. Their research will be published in the May 14 issue of Science, the peer-reviewed journal published by AAAS, the nonprofit science society.
After compiling the global field data, Sinervo and his colleagues studied the effects of rising temperatures on lizards’ bodies, and created a model of extinction risks for various lizard species around the world. Their model accurately predicted specific locations on five continents where populations of lizards have recently gone extinct, and it might inform researchers on how these patterns of extinction will continue in the future.
“How quickly can Earth’s lizards adapt to the rising global temperatures? That’s the important question,” Sinervo said. “We are actually seeing lowland species moving upward in elevation, slowly driving upland species extinct, and if the upland species can’t evolve fast enough then they’re going to continue to go extinct.”
According to the researchers’ global model, which is derived from today’s trends of carbon dioxide emissions from human activities, about six percent of lizard species are due for extinction by the year 2050. Since carbon dioxide hangs around in the atmosphere for decades, the researchers say that this statistic can no longer be avoided. However, they do say that concentrated global efforts to reduce carbon dioxide in the atmosphere could possibly avert the 2080 scenarios, in which 20 percent of lizard species are expected to disappear from the planet.
The detailed study notes specifically that lizards that bear live young are particularly at risk of extinction, compared to those that lay eggs. “Live-bearers experience almost twice the risk of egg-layers largely because live-bearers have evolved lower body temperatures that heighten extinction risk,” Sinervo said. “We are literally watching these species disappear before our eyes.”
Sinervo began focusing his attention on lizard extinctions after he noticed an obvious trend during his field work in France. He identified an unsettling pattern of lizard extinctions with French researchers, Jean Clobert and Benoit Heulin, while they were surveying some of their well-documented populations. Disturbed by their findings, they contacted colleagues around the world—Jack Sites and Donald Miles in the United States, Fausto Méndez-de-la-Cruz in Mexico, and Carlos Frederico Duarte Rocha in Brazil—and a global collaboration ensued.
“This work is a fine example of interdisciplinary science and international collaboration, using methods and data from a range of scientific disciplines to improve confidence in the prediction of the biological effects of contemporary climate change, and in particular showing how long-term records and research are so crucial to the understanding of ecological change,” said Andrew Sugden, the International Managing Editor of Science.
“We would never have been able to do this without certain free, online tools like Google Scholar and Google Earth,” Sinervo said. “It took us awhile to pinpoint the appropriate search terms. But once we did, we locked onto key published studies. I was surprised at how fast researchers began sending us data… That’s what happens though: When scientists see a problem, with global evidence backing it, they come together.”
In order to fine-tune their model with this surprising global outpouring of data, Sinervo and his colleagues used a small electronic device that mimics the body temperature of a lizard basking in the sun. They placed these thermal models in sun-drenched areas for four months at sites in Mexico where lizard populations were still thriving—and at sites where they have already gone extinct.
“There are periods of the day when lizards can’t be out, and essentially have to retreat to cooler places,” Sinervo said. “When they’re not out and about, lizards aren’t foraging for food. So we assessed how many hours of the day lizards would have been driven out of the sun at these different locations. Then, we were able to parameterize our global model.”
For the authors, who claim a deep appreciation for these lizards and the important role the reptiles play in the global food chain, these findings are both “devastating and heart-wrenching.” But, they say, hope does remain for the world’s lizards.
“If the governments of the world can implement a concerted change to limit our carbon dioxide emissions, then we could bend the curve and hold levels of extinction to the 2050 scenarios,” Sinervo concluded. “But it has to be a global push… I don’t want to tell my child that we once had a chance to save these lizards, but we didn’t. I want to do my best to save them while I can.”
Reptiles don’t like it when it’s warmer, eh? That must be why there are so many in Antarctica, and so few in North Queensland, then…… no, wait…..
How on earth can you show that these extinctions are the result of climate change and nothing else? It would be almost impossible to eliminate every single other factor.
They have a conclusion. They eliminate the most obvious other causes of the effect observed, and call this ‘proof’. Bang that into a model, extrapolate a few decades or centuries, and “we’re all going to die!” This is true of Hidden Global Warming just as much as it is of this ridiculous study.
“……used their findings to develop a predictive model”. Oh, oh, more models. So the argument is if I design a model based on some assumptions and that model corresponds to what actually happens my assumptions are correct. Would that be like the level of women’s hemlines and the economy?
How many species did the model predict would appear due to global warming? What’s that? Zero?? Some model!!
“Lizards are important prey for many birds, snakes, and other animals, and they are important predators of insects.”
Actually, the lizards have moved on and have taken up a different line of work.
Most of them are working for Warren Buffet in the insurance business.
Hmm – I wonder whether they possibly normalised the data for habitat loss and other direct anthropogenic imapcts before leaping on the climate bandwagon?
Just wondering you know.
When I lived in Michigan, Indiana, Philadelphia, there were no lizards because it was too cold. When I lived in Nsukka, Nigeria where it was sweltering hot there were lizards all over the building walls. Now I live near mild climate San Jose and am surrounded by blue belly (w. fence lizard) and alligator lizards. Science and Nature are moving closer to supermarket tabloids.
As temperatures rise and fall, species increase and decrease depending on their optimums.
“Although the lizards normally bask in the sun to warm up, higher temperatures exceeding their physiological limits keep them in the shade, restricting their activity and preventing them from foraging for food.”
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Why forage when the food comes right to you, looking for shade, in your shady spot.
When I was a kid, my sister had a pet cat. We had to be careful when we moved between inside and outside because often the cat would be waiting outside the door with it’s catch of lizard that it wanted to eat with it’s cat food. How many wild cats are there out there working on the lizard population?
The question is, is there really a rapid increase in lizard extinctions? The particular species mentioned has dozens of local subspecies so it is possible some regional/local mountain subspecies can not be located any more.
The climate model generated impacts are predictable enough but we’ve seen exaggerations like this before.
Is Science going to let through a claim like this if it were not true (species extinctions are at another level in my opinion and would require a greater level of review by Science)?
I, for one, would want to see other proof given the history of this field. And it better be true or someone should wind-down this journal.
My apathy knows no bounds. This is supposed to be science, but sounds more like another practical joke. The model didn’t predict. It looks like they used it to post-dict alleged extinctions. There’s no cause-and-effect shown for CO², but they claim it anyway. Models are not science. Science is dead. Science is a joke.
Let me get this straight … if temperatures and CO2 emissions climb to a value closer to what it was like when lizards ruled the world, they will go extinct?
These people are either complete morons or believe that we are.
The insensitivity of the google ads never fail to crack me up 🙂
This time, the article about endangered lizards are accompanied by an ad far a reptile skin ipod casing!
Oh I miss, Douglas Adams, we sure could use him now, even if he wiould maybeen a warmist, he would have been the one with a sense of humour:
[An extraterrestrial robot and spaceship has just landed on earth. The robot steps out of the spaceship…]
“I come in peace,” it said, adding after a long moment of further grinding, “take me to your Lizard.”
Ford Prefect, of course, had an explanation for this, as he sat with Arthur and watched the nonstop frenetic news reports on television, none of which had anything to say other than to record that the thing had done this amount of damage which was valued at that amount of billions of pounds and had killed this totally other number of people, and then say it again, because the robot was doing nothing more than standing there, swaying very slightly, and emitting short incomprehensible error messages.
“It comes from a very ancient democracy, you see…”
“You mean, it comes from a world of lizards?”
“No,” said Ford, who by this time was a little more rational and coherent than he had been, having finally had the coffee forced down him, “nothing so simple. Nothing anything like to straightforward. On its world, the people are people. The leaders are lizards. The people hate the lizards and the lizards rule the people.”
“Odd,” said Arthur, “I thought you said it was a democracy.”
“I did,” said ford. “It is.”
“So,” said Arthur, hoping he wasn’t sounding ridiculously obtuse, “why don’t the people get rid of the lizards?”
“It honestly doesn’t occur to them,” said Ford. “They’ve all got the vote, so they all pretty much assume that the government they’ve voted in more or less approximates to the government they want.”
“You mean they actually vote for the lizards?”
“Oh yes,” said Ford with a shrug, “of course.”
“But,” said Arthur, going for the big one again, “why?”
“Because if they didn’t vote for a lizard,” said Ford, “the wrong lizard might get in. Got any gin?”
“What?”
“I said,” said Ford, with an increasing air of urgency creeping into his voice, “have you got any gin?”
“I’ll look. Tell me about the lizards.”
Ford shrugged again.
“Some people say that the lizards are the best thing that ever happened to them,” he said. “They’re completely wrong of course, completely and utterly wrong, but someone’s got to say it.”
“Kum Dollison says:
May 13, 2010 at 4:59 pm
Uh, in the third paragraph (or, 4th, if you count the para. describing the “International team of biologists . . . . . . . . .. ..) you have this:
While recent global extinctions of amphibians are not directly related to climate change, but largely due to the spread of disease,”
Sorry if i point out the obvious or already known, but lizards are not amphibians but reptiles.
The mass extinction of amphibians a year or two ago was first boasted as an effect of climate change in the media and by researchers – lots of frogs and toads died. It was later found to be caused by a fungus that strangely spread worldwide, and the cause of the spread was later attributed to the researchers themselves, carrying around the spores on their instruments and boots as they frantically visited remote sites to check if the amphibians there were still ok – thus causing the extinctions themselves.
Using a model is easier than field trips. Michael Mann took 500,000 dollars for one tree and it’s ring. 2 trees equals a million. It is important to save money.
Without nasty consequences, fear and urgency, the grants dry up.
Nature – 10 May 2010
Whipping up a little natural selection
Manipulated islands reveal secrets of lizard adaptation.
http://www.nature.com/news/2010/100510/full/news.2010.226.html
Good night all.
More warmist spin, hysteria, and pompous drivel.
“If the only thing you have is a thermometer, everything looks like global warming”, to paraphrase the old saying “If the only thing you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail”.
Who do these scientists think they are fooling when they make the claim that the only change in the lizard’s habitat is the temperature?
Here in Arizona, you have a variety of climate zones due to altitude, ranging from desert to alpine. I’ve lived at low and (presently) high altitude, and in the deserts we always had tons of lizards. At higher altitude (7000 feet) where I now live, they hibernate during the snowy weather. After a particularly sever and long winter, they are less numerous in the spring. This is one such year. However, I’ve been at lower altitude and they are everywhere; even the rarer Gila Monster seems to be having a population boom.
Next, they’ll be telling us that, due to melting sea ice, the penguins are going to be eaten by polar bears…
Florida is covered with various breeds of little Geckos. And their vision is amazing. They know if you are looking at them, from quite a distance. One step in their direction (while looking at them) and they run.
How to catch a Gecko:
When they get into your house and you see one on the wall, if you walk toward it, it will run along the wall away from you. (And they’re fast). So, act like you don’t know it’s there, and stroll casually in his direction. When you get close enough, look at him, and he will freak out and run. Run him toward a corner of the room. As he approaches the corner, quickly step toward the wall he is about to intersect. You are now stepping in front of him. He’ll turn to run back. Step toward the other wall. Now he really freaks out, and jumps for the floor to run past you. When he hits the carpet, his little sticky feet don’t work too well, and he’ll look like he’s treading water (This only works with carpet) . Now you just reach down and pick him up. They’re pretty cool. None of them bit me. Then you can put him back outside where he can eat more bugs. If you leave them inside, they get dessicated and end up shriveled.
So now they’re all dying? That’s too bad. I’ll miss those little suckers. 🙂
13 May: WaPo: Rosalind Helderman: Moran weighs in on Cuccinelli subpoena
We haven’t heard from a lot from Democratic politicians on the topic of Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli’s global warming subpoena to the University of Virginia, but perhaps that’s about the change
On Wednesday, U.S. Rep. Jim Moran (D) sent Cuccinelli a particularly blistering letter about Cuccinelli’s attempt to get documents related to the work of climate scientist Michael Mann, a former U-Va. professor.
Read the full letter here (LINK) http://voices.washingtonpost.com/virginiapolitics/2010/05/moran_weighs_in_on_cuccinelli.html
from the undated Moran letter:
“Such action is reminiscent of the Catholic Church’s initial response when Galileo Galilei defended his views that the sun was the center of the universe in his famous work, Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems. It was not until October 31, 1992 when Pope John Paul II expressed regret for how the Galileo affair was handled that the Catholic Church brought the controversy toward some closure…
History will neither reflect kindly on those who reject science in the pursuit of short-term economic and political gain, nor will it look kindly on your attempt to tarnish the good name of Professor Michael Mann.”
LOL: WaPo editorial includes link to climateaudit to defend Mann and the editorial:
13 May: Wapo Editorial: University of Virginia should fight the Va. attorney general’s inquiry
It’s clear from his statements that the “Climategate” controversy — in which hackers stole records of e-mails between climate researchers that global warming skeptics then distorted — inspired his witch hunt…
The university plans to seek an extension of the deadline for challenging the attorney general’s “civil investigative demand.” But it must file a challenge. Moreover, Gov. Robert F. McDonnell should join the dozens of others — including some of Mr. Mann’s harshest critics (LINK TO CA) — in condemning Mr. Cuccinelli, lest he be implicated in this assault on reason.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/12/AR2010051204539.html
Did I read that correctly? Let me read it again.
OK. I think the statement is saying that lizards we haven’t discovered yet are going extinct because of global warming. In even simpler terms, we don’t know that they are there but we know that they are dying out because of us.
If there is no honest mistake in the wording of the statement, then whoever uttered that statement should be stripped of all credentials as an Earthling and be declared as an alien fifth columnist. We don’t actually know that there are aliens out there, of course, but we know that we have successfully killed off most of them, and a few remaining survivors are now pretending to be human scientists sowing discord among Earthlings.
Sinervo and his colleagues recently went to the Yucatán to test this theory. With thermal sensors, PVC pipe, plastic caps, and automobile primer paint, they created “electronic lizards”—temperature sensors painted to have light reflectivity similar to that of a lizard—and placed them at two sites where lizards could still be found and two where they’d gone extinct.
This study is just too funny for words.
http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/2010/05/climate-change-causing-lizards-t.html
We have the Gieco gecko to thank for this alarmist scare. They’ve anthropomorhized cute lizards with British accents. Hopefully stinkbugs and rattlesnakes will demand equal protection from our noxious CO2 emissions.
jorgekafkazar says:
May 13, 2010 at 5:40 pm
Science is dead. Science is a joke.
I could not agree more.
Do these so called scientists realize that they are creating a society that will start to question everything considered science as this area is so polluted with garbage that true good science is written off now. Good science cannot even be published now as too many “PEERS” guard the garbage science.
I know it’s been mentioned, but we’re talking about 0.6°C “climate change.”
And most of that tiny change happens – if it happens at all – at night, and near the poles. So the rare and endangered Arctic snow lizards are the only ones affected.
My theory is that global warming will cause economic failure in Spain.
Can I get funding to research that?
Oh wait………..