Here are the abundances of each native reptile species in your garden compared to the average abundance across all forest, garden, and scrub sites we surveyed.
The three nocturnal native gecko species and Laurent’s Whiptail had relatively equal abundance across the site types, while the diurnal Striped Anole was most abundant in forest sites.
Exotic species are species that are not native to Curaçao and were introduced to Curaçao from another location by humans. Exotic species become invasive when they start to cause ecological or economic problems. To our knowledge, there are seven exotic reptile and amphibian species currently living on Curaçao, and we surveyed six of them. The seventh exotic species, Tokay Gecko, was discovered in 2018. Individuals of this large predatory gecko were kept as pets, but escaped. All of the exotic species are primarily nocturnal, and at this point they have not been studied well enough to know conclusively if any can be considered invasive.
This is the percentage of all forest, garden, and scrub sites we surveyed that had each exotic species.
As you can see, all six exotic species prefer garden sites and only one exotic, the Colombian Four-eyed Frog, was found at scrub sites. Interestingly, the two species found only at garden sites, the Mourning Gecko and the Asian House Gecko, are two species recently introduced to Curaçao. This means they were likely introduced to a garden (probably resort garden) and have not had sufficient time yet to spread into natural forest or scrub sites.
In total, we recorded 24 native bird species in our surveys. We only surveyed passerines (songbirds) and raptors (hawk, kestrel, caracara) and did not survey waterfowl (e.g, flamingos) or domestic fowl (e.g, peacocks, chickens). Below is the total number of native bird species we found in your garden relative to the average number of bird species found at forest, garden, and scrub sites.
As you can see, the number of species was relatively equal across site types.
Brown-throated Parrot (Aratinga pertinax) |
Venezuelan Troupial (Icterus icterus) |
Tropical Mockingbird (Mimus gilvus) |
Scaly-naped Pigeon (Patagioenas squamosa) |
Black-faced Grassquit (Tiaris bicolor) |
There are approximatly 13 exotic bird species on Curaçao, eight of which are parrots. Many of these exotics were accidentally introduced to Curaçao as pets who escaped. We focused on surveying five of these exotic species. Note, there are actually three Amazona exotic parrots, but they are difficult to distinguish in surveys.
This is the percentage of all forest, garden, and scrub sites we surveyed that had each exotic bird species. Most exotic bird species prefer gardens and only the Saffron Finch was found in scrub habitats.
We surveyed the arthropods (insects and spiders) that live on the plants in your garden. In total, we found 395 arthropod species, however, the species are not well-enough studied to know which are exotic.
Here is the total number of arthropod species we found in your garden compared to the average number of species across all forest, garden, and scrub sites we surveyed
As you can see, garden sites by far had the highest number of species!
Here is the total number of individual arthropods (abundance) we found in your garden compared to the average abundance of arthropods across all garden, scrub and forest sites we surveyed
Again, garden sites had the highest abundance of arthropods across all site types. This was due to the high number of True Bug species found at garden sites (see composition section below).
Based on the abundances of each order, we calculated the arthropod composition of each site. The plots below show the composition of arthropods in your garden compared to the average composition of arthropods in garden, forest and scrub sites we surveyed.
Garden sites are dominated by true bugs; roughly half of all individuals we collected in garden sites were true bugs and many of these where from species that like to live in grass. In contrast, forest sites were dominated by flies, and scrub sites had a more equal representation of orders.
Gardens of Curacao Biodiversity Project by iEcoLab @ Temple University is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.