4.1. Inter-Mountain Dispersal Dynamics
The successful colonization of three mountains after prescribed burning indicates that such burns are an effective tool for establishing dispersal corridors for collared lizards across areas with no glades. Many other species live in fire-maintained communities [
14]. Hence, prescribed burns may be an important conservation management tool for establishing dispersal corridors for other species.
There have been many studies on the impact of fire on dispersal, mostly in plants, but some in animals [
15,
16]. Most of the animal studies reviewed in these papers [
15,
16] were primarily concerned with the impact on dispersal of burn history or movement through a large fire maintained community, such as a savanna, as well as movements triggered directly by fire. Reviewed studies that focused on movement between habitat patches, such as the glades in this paper, were more limited. Moreover, the habitat patch studies were in the context of dispersal “motivated by the need to leave a site that has become unsuitable” [
15] (p. 984). Motivation due to habitat quality is unlikely to be the driving force in the study presented here, as the continued occupation and high population numbers in the source glades on Stegall Mountain (
Figure A2 and
Figure A3) suggests that the continued fire management regime has maintained these glades as highly suitable habitats for collared lizards. What, then, could motivate lizards from Stegall to disperse through kilometers of burned space with no glades?
First, consider the ability of collared lizards to make such a long dispersal event. The burned forests show a 410% increase in the abundance of orthopterans over an unburned forest [
10]. Since orthopterans are the primary prey for collared lizards [
17], so food is much more abundant in a recently burned forest than in an unburned forest. Also, there are many light patches on the burned forest floor that would be important for thermoregulation [
10]. Prey abundance and light patches can explain the ability of lizards to make long dispersal events through a gladeless, burned forest, but not the motivation.
Instead, the social behavior of these lizards provides a possible motivation for these long dispersal events through burned woodland. Specifically, in this system, all observed dispersal events to new mountain systems involved hatchlings. Both male and female adult collared lizards are territorial, and defend these territories aggressively against other lizards [
13]. Moreover, adult collared lizards are cannibalistic towards hatchlings [
18]. Hence, in a glade occupied by many adults, a hatchling or a yearling would have little chance of establishing a territory and moreover would be at risk of being eaten. Indeed, hatchlings spend their time at the margins of the glades and in the forest edges during the summer and only move into the central portions of the glades after the adults have begun brumation in late August and early September (personal observations). These observations imply that social and predator-prey interactions with adult lizards could be a motivating factor for long distance dispersal events through gladeless areas.
4.2. Inter-Mountain Colonization Patterns
Although all three mountain colonizations are concordant with the main hypothesis that prescribed fires between mountains can create dispersal corridors, each mountain had a different pattern of colonization, and these differences reveal additional features about dispersal and colonization, as will now be discussed.
Mule Mountain was quickly colonized within four months of the burn. Conley, Neuwald and Templeton [
13] used a landscape analysis that revealed that steep slopes have a high resistance to dispersal. In contrast, relatively flat ridges have the least resistance to dispersal. As shown in
Figure 1, although Mule is separated from Stegall by about one km, it is connected by a high ridge with no steep slopes. Hence, this 1 km ridge with no glades does not serve as a barrier to colonization and dispersal once the ecosystem has been fire-restored. Indeed, the first lizard to disperse from Stegall to Mule came from a glade close to this low resistance ridge (
Figure 1). Subsequently, dispersal reached the levels indicative of a single stable metapopulation, and the single colonized glade on Mule Mountain was included as part of Stegall Mountain in previous analysis [
4,
5,
8,
9,
10,
13]. In this case, the dispersal corridor between Stegall and Mule allowed the absorption of the Mule population into the Stegall metapopulation (
Figure A2 and
Figure A3).
Thorny Mountain was colonized by the Stegall Mountain population within a little more than a year after the burn. Direct dispersal between Stegall to Thorny was observed (
Figure 1).
Figure 1 shows a ridge interconnecting Stegall and Thorny mountains. At all other places, the valley between the two mountains is much broader and there are two creeks that start at this ridge, one going to the southeast and the other to the northwest (
Figure 1). The ridge in
Figure 1 is the only connection between the two mountains that does not require crossing a creek. After the prescribed 1999 burn, A.R.T. walked this ridge and observed that the woody understory had been largely cleared. Moreover, the forest floor was now dominated by grasses and herbaceous plants, with many light patches. These attributes facilitate dispersal of hatchlings through a forested habitat [
4,
5]. Indeed, two hatchlings marked on glades from this south-eastern knoll of Stegall were captured as yearlings on glades on the south-eastern part of Thorny (
Figure 1). The glades on Stegall that produced known dispersers to Thorny were both located near the curving ridge interconnecting the two mountains (
Figure 1).
Figure 1 also shows the paths of least resistance to dispersal that interconnect the southernmost portions of both mountains. This path has greater resistance than the ridge between Stegall and Mule (
Figure 1). Moreover, the minimum straight-line distance between Stegall and Thorny is around 2 km, and following the curves of the red paths shown in
Figure 1 are about 3 km. This southern portion of Thorny was also the first site on the mountain with observed scat and lizards, indicating that this was the area of initial colonization. These observations indicate that dispersal from Stegall to Thorny was established shortly after the 1999 prescribed burn and are consistent with the ridge shown in
Figure 1 being a dispersal corridor. However, movement between Thorny and Stegall would be more difficult than between Mule and Stegall because of both distance and resistance. This would explain the initial small population size on Thorny (
Figure A3) as being due to a founder event because few lizards were able to cross from Stegall to Thorny. A strong founder effect has been confirmed genetically [
19]. After this initial colonization, the number of glades colonized and the population size on Thorny increased steadily (
Figure 2,
Figure A2 and
Figure A3).
The colonization of Mill Mountain was quite different from Thorny and Mule. Thorny’s colonization was an event that occurred in 2000, with multiple permanent glade populations established by 2001 (
Figure 2). In contrast, Mill’s colonization was an erratic process, characterized by the sporadic and transient appearance of individual lizards starting in 2004. A single but small permanent glade population was established in 2008, and multiple glade populations only by 2012. In 2012, 19 lizards were captured on Mill, more than twice the 9 captured in 2011 and much more than any previous year (
Figure A3). The estimated sample coverage in 2012 was very high, so the estimated population size using the Chao et al. estimator [
20] was 19.66 (
Figure A3). This doubling of population size led to an even larger increase in population size in 2013 (an estimated size of 47.57 lizards,
Figure A3) and a tripling of the number of glades occupied (
Figure 4 and
Figure A2).
The transient nature of lizards on Mill prior to 2008 could be a consequence of a very low probability of dispersal to Mill from source populations on nearby Thorny Mountain. A permanent population requires at least one male and one female on the same glade at the same time. On Mill, the presence of single, transient individuals did not start permanent populations (
Figure 4). This sporadic colonization cannot be attributed to distance. The glades on the northern part of Thorny are only 330 m away from the nearest glades on Mill (
Figure A5), making this the shortest distance between any pair of these four mountains. Moreover, glade populations had been established on the northern part of Thorny as early as 2001 (
Figure 2), so there was a nearby source population for the colonization of Mill three years before the first transient lizard was observed. However, Thorny and Mill are separated by a narrow valley with steep slopes on both sides of this valley (
Figure A5). A paved road also separates the two mountains. Hence, high resistance due to steep slopes and perhaps the road may be the primary reason why the colonization of Mill from Thorny was such a long and sporadic process.
If geographic distance was the primary constraint for colonizing a new mountain, the relative ease of colonization would be expected to follow the order: Mill (330 m to the nearest source population) > Mule (1 km) > Thorny (2 km). If, instead, dispersal resistance was the primary constraint for colonization, then the relative ease of colonization would follow the order: Mule > Thorny > Mill. The observed results correspond to resistance rather than distance having the stronger impact on colonization. Therefore, the ease of a mountain to be colonized depended less on physical distance and more on resistance factors, which in turn depended upon the dispersal behavior of the target species as well as terrain factors.
4.3. Intra-Mountain Colonization Patterns
In addition to the initial colonization of each mountain, distinct intra-mountain colonization processes were observed as well. First, as previously described [
4,
5], the colonization phase for new Stegall glades was initiated after prescribed burn management on Stegall Mountain. The source for this colonization was the translocated populations on the same mountain. The colonization of new glades spread out from these source populations is a steady, step-wise fashion that included Mule Mountain once it was incorporated into prescribed burning (see Appendix B in [
5]). This colonization phase was characterized by low dispersal rates and small dispersal distances, particularly among hatchlings—the main colonizers [
5]. Dispersal rates and distances increased as the population approached saturation and entered a phase of a stable metapopulation on the glades of Stegall/Mule Mountains [
5].
The colonization of Thorny Mountain showed an opposite pattern of intra-mountain dispersal from Stegall. On Thorny, there were large dispersal distances during the early phase of colonization followed by a significant shortening of those distances as many glades became inhabited (
Figure 3 and
Figure A4). One hypothesis for this difference is that dispersing lizards assess the quality of new glades that they encounter, and if the new glade is assessed to be of low quality, the lizard continues its dispersal journey. One important aspect of glade quality might be the presence of lizards of the opposite sex on the glade. A glade with no potential mates obviously would preclude any reproductive success of a newly arrived, dispersing lizard. Stegall had a stable and large source population close to many unoccupied glades when prescribed burning was initiated. As a result, after burning there could be a steady stream of many dispersing individuals that would quickly encounter nearby glades. Under these conditions, the probability that a formerly unoccupied glade would contain at least a male and a female is high, so there would be no incentive for further dispersal. This would yield the observed pattern on Stegall of an initial reduced rate of dispersal, dispersal distances being short, and a steadily increasing geographical front of newly colonized glades from the original source. However, as the population grew, the territoriality of these lizards would reverse these patterns because lizards unable to establish a territory would be motivated to disperse. Indeed, Conley, Neuwald and Templeton [
13] showed that lizards had a higher probability of dispersing from a glade that had structural features that facilitated the ability of lizards to completely dominate their territories. Hence, dispersal is expected to increase again in the stable metapopulation phase of Stegall under this hypothesis, as was observed.
In contrast, for Thorny the source population is far away (on a different mountain,
Figure 1), and the initial population sizes (
Figure A3) and the genetic signature of a founder effect [
19] revealed that only a few individuals successfully found their way from Stegall to Thorny. During the 8 years of this study on Thorny (1999 through 2006), a total of 198 hatchlings were marked on Stegall and later recaptured as yearlings or older. Of these, two had dispersed to Thorny (
Figure 1) and the remainder were recaptured on Stegall. This yields an annual dispersal rate of 0.0012. As a consequence, the few lizards that initially dispersed to Thorny would be expected to encounter glades that were unlikely to have other lizards, thus motivating further dispersal. Hence, dispersal distances would be large during the years immediately following the initial colonization as more glades are colonized, there are also more lizards and more geographical sources scattered over the mountain to serve as a source for dispersers (
Figure 2,
Figure A2 and
Figure A3). This situation would cause dispersal distances to decrease over time, as observed (
Figure 3 and
Figure A4).
Another aspect of the colonization of Thorny is revealed in
Figure 2. The glades in that figure are ordered from the northwest tip of Thorny to the southeast tip. Note that there are many intervening glades that are not occupied. Many of these glades are very small and scattered geographically over the mountain and were never occupied or only exhibited sporadic presence of scat. These glades are not shown in
Figure 2 but can be seen in
Figure A4. This parallels the observations on Stegall and Mule: lizards prefer larger glades. However, there are two tight geographical clusters of unoccupied glades or those with sporadic scat, including some large glades. The first cluster of interest is glades TM52, TM12, TM36, TM13U&M, TM13L, TM14, and TM8 that are encircled by a dotted line in
Figure A4. All of these glades are centrally located, and glade TM13U&M is one of the larger glades on Thorny (
Figure A4). Nevertheless, the only sign of lizards on this central cluster was scat on TM36 in 2005. This glade cluster is on a northeast facing slope (
Figure A4), resulting in reduced solar incidence compared to the other glades on Thorny. Collared lizards prefer hot, sunny environments [
21], so this failure to colonize even large, centrally located glades indicates that collared lizards select for glades that are hot and sunny during the summer.
The second block with many uncolonized glades is defined by glades TM28 through TM22N in
Figure 2 and
Figure A4. As mentioned earlier, there was a gap in fire management on Thorny until 2007. This fire management gap covers the glades from TM28 to TM22N. The only glades in this fire management gap that were colonized or had scat were glades that bordered the fire line (
Figure 2). There is no doubt that lizards could reach these glades because dispersal events that crossed through this unburned area were detected (
Figure A4), allowing the lizards to colonize glades both north and south of the unburned area. Accordingly, their absence in the unburned area indicates that the lizards are actively avoiding colonizing this specific cluster of unburned glades. Further support for this inference comes from a limited survey through much of Thorny in 2008 using the old mining road/jeep trail. This trail passes through the previously unburned area, which had recently been burned in 2007. Lizards were observed and captured in glade TM21, the largest glade in the previously unburned area. Therefore, once burned, this glade was rapidly colonized. This evidence, combined with the results presented above as well as the results given in Conley, Neuwald and Templeton [
13] on the structural features of a glade, all indicate that collared lizards are capable of making assessments of glade quality on many dimensions that influence their decisions to remain in or disperse from a glade. Hence, colonization of a new mountain and the glades therein is highly non-random.
Unfortunately, not much can be concluded about dispersal on Mill Mountain, since it was not until 2012 that the colonization of more than one glade began (
Figure 4), and sampling was halted in 2014 with an incomplete survey. As a result, very few dispersal events were observed, and all were short distances (
Figure 4), which is not unexpected on this small mountain.
4.4. Conclusions
Prescribed burning in the forested grade-free areas between the mountains did establish dispersal corridors that lead to multiple colonizations of new mountains. The lizards colonized these new mountains without human aided translocations. This is an important conclusion for management, because translocations are expensive and time-consuming and typically involve only one species. In contrast, prescribed burning has many conservation benefits for multiple species [
14], making it easier to fund and execute. This work also shows that the resistance to dispersal of the terrain separating mountains was a major factor in colonization. Hence, when dispersal corridors are being designed for a specific species, landscape resistance should be considered. The program Circuitscape was used to determine dispersal resistance factors for the collared lizards based on microsatellite genetic variation [
13]. Given the advances in genomic technology since these microsatellite surveys were performed, high resolution genetic surveys can now be performed on non-model species. This allows dispersal resistance to be determined through programs like Circuitscape for virtually any species of conservation interest. This work shows the importance of having such resistance data.
This study also shows that the subsequent colonization of the glades on a mountain occurred in a highly non-random fashion. Multiple factors influence this non-random pattern, including burning, internal glade structure, the initial colonization size, ease of recruits from the source mountain, and the plastic social behavior of these territorial lizards. Patently, the more that is known about the basic biology of a species of conservation concern, the better a conservation management program can be designed. In the frequent case in which gaps of knowledge exist for a species of concern, the management program should be designed as an experiment with long-term monitoring to gain that knowledge, as the work on collared lizards illustrates.
None of this colonizing potential could have been realized without landscape level burns that include the intervening terrain that separates the mountains. Hence, dispersal corridors do not require the presence of habitats (in this case, glades) which can sustain a permanent population, but they must be designed and managed in a manner that allows dispersal through them. A lack of fires produces an environment through which collared lizards will not disperse. But if you burn it, they will come.