Dwarf Chameleons of Cape Town's Journal

April 10, 2020

Chameleon Atlas half-way Report - 10 April 2020

Thanks Everyone for your great contributions!! In the last few days we have doubled our records of chameleons in Cape Town.

Observations before the 2019 City Nature Challenge tallied
41 Observations of 2 Species with 48 Identifiers by 65 observers
The species were
© Cape Dwarf Chameleon Bradypodion pumilum -138 observations
© Namaqua Dwarf Chameleon Bradypodion occidentale - 3 observations
Most of us are familiar with the Cape, but fewer people are aware that the Namaqua Chameleon extends within Strandveld on the West Coast south to Melkbos. and so we have two chameleons occurring naturally in the City.

We upped our game during the City Nature Challenge in 2019, when over four days & week following, we recorded
89 Observations of the Cape Dwarf Chameleon with 42 Identifiers by 62 observers.

Since then we have recorded a further
119 Observations of 2 Species with 35 Identifiers by 62 observers.

Clearly the iNat bug has bitten and Capetonians are monitoring our wildlife.

With the 2020 Covid-19 epidemic, the City of Cape Town and SANBI decided as one of the Lockdown activities to map and monitor our chameleons. This project was created on March 31 and the City issued a press release on April 8.
During Lockdown until 10 April, after two weeks of Lockdown, we have recorded:
196 Observations of 2 Species with 25 Identifiers & 99 observers

Except, that the Namaqua Chameleon is apparently not in many peoples gardens - can we please have LOTS more records from Melkbosstrand, Blouberg, and anyone living north, including Atlantis and Malmesbury!!! How far south does it extend? Does it like gardens? Please help.
© Our second species during the lockdown is a new record to Cape Town. We have an alien species! The Eastern Cape Dwarf Chameleon Bradypodion ventrale has been discovered in Hout Bay in two gardens so far. We have no idea how it has gotten here, but the most likely cause is the nursery trade with plants cultivated upcountry being shipped to Cape Town with a few chameleons on board. We would love to know how extensive it is in Hout Bay, so can everyone in the Independent Republic of Hout Bay please check their gardens and post their chameleons onto iNaturlist. We are particularly interested in how widely dispersed it is, and if it is happily coexisting with our Cape Chameleon, or if they are deadly foes. As of today, we have no records of Cape Cameleons from Hout Bay - only Eastern Chameleons!

Please help us: this is something everyone can do during lockdown - explore your gardens. People on Hout Bay: do you have Cape or Eastern Chameleons. And people on the West Coast do you have Namaqua or Cape - or both - Chameleons in your gardens.

How do we tell these apart? Examples are visible here:

(more here: https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/dwarf-chameleons-of-cape-town?tab=species)
Colour is not so important: these are chameleons! They change their colours: green on foliage, brown on dead bushes, black when upset, pale at night and brightly coloured sires when charming a dam.
The scales on the chin and on the casque (helmet), and the shape of the casque are the features to look at.

Of course, it is not only people in Cape Town who have been excited by this project, and the enthusiasm has spilled over into the winelands and beyond. And we have a record of another alien the Knysna Chameleon, just outside the city border- https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/27681516 . Probably the same modus operandi - spread by the plant trade. Please - if you live in Eerste River, Blue Downs, Croydon or Helderberg area, please check your gardens and record all the chameleons you can see. You may well have the Knysna Chameleon in your garden! Lots more records please ...

But where does the Cape Chameleon occur?
So far during lockdown we have no records of chameleons from
Mamre
Atlantis
Camps Bay
Hout Bay (only records of Eastern Chameleons so far)
Goodwood
Parow
Elsies River
Blue Downs
Kayelitsha
These are the more denser or more recent suburbs, and gardens are smaller and younger. Does that preclude chameleons being present?
But we need lots more data from all suburbs - from everywhere.

At present the best recorded suburbs are:
Grassy Park, Bergvliet, Mowbray, Parklands, Durbanville and Somerset West.

Look at the map here: is your garden on the map?
https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/dwarf-chameleons-of-cape-town?tab=observations&subtab=map
But we need more data from everywhere.

The keenest participants have helped by filling out our data fields using the Chameleons of Cape Town Atlas Project.

https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/chameleons-of-cape-town-atlas
The results so far are:
115 observations have been submitted by 53 participants (for lockdown we can assume about a participant per garden).

Garden suitability (How suitable is your garden for chameleons?)

  • 81: Trees, shrubs & lawn
  • 27: Shrubs only
  • 3: Trees & lawn
  • 2: Shrubs & lawn
  • 0: Lawn only
    ( n.a. 11)
    So by far the majority of gardens had the three most common plant elements, but chameleons are found in any garden with more than a lawn.

Pets in garden (a summary of pets visiting the garden)

  • 36: dogs
  • 29: none
  • 27: cats
  • 17: dogs & cats
  • 4: none but neighbours have cats
    (n.a. 10)
    So - dogs are cool for chameleons, but they can survive very well in gardens with cats.

Number of chameleons:
about
~ 70 recorded 1 chameleon;
~ 30 2-5 chameleons
~ 10 6-10 chameleons
~ 10 recorded more than 10 chameleons (two recorded 30 chameleons).
~ None recorded no chameleons: - - To record NO chameleons after you have looked carefully add the "Chameleons of Cape Town Atlas" project to an observation of a plant and fill in all the fields.
Most gardens only have a few. But following breeding, gardens can be full of baby chameleons (with 30 recorded!).

It is premature to come to conclusions yet. We need lots more data please. If you have a garden, then please look for chameleons and record them for the City of Cape Town Chameleon Atlas.

Many thanks to everyone who has participated so far.
Please remember to join the project and you will be notified of news updates when they are posted.

Posted on April 10, 2020 10:02 PM by tonyrebelo tonyrebelo | 4 comments | Leave a comment

Expanding Project Scope

We have discovered some Chameleons in the city that are not Cape Dwarf.

These are probably brought accidentally into Cape Town by the nursery industry, although some may be misguided people moving them around between holiday destinations and home.

Please dont transport Chameleons (or tadpoles, or anything) between destinations: our biodiversity is quite unlike anything in Europe or North America, and in the Cape the biodiversity changes between George and Cape Town (400km) are equivalent and exceed that between Morocco and Sudan (4000km).

The project within the city is thus expanded to all Chameleons in the genus Bradypodion ...
This wont make a big change, but will alert us to more records of out-of-range species in Cape Town.
see the species tab of the project to see the other species recorded so far ...

Posted on April 10, 2020 09:54 AM by tonyrebelo tonyrebelo | 2 comments | Leave a comment

March 31, 2020

Its Breeding Time

As Autumn approaches our chameleons will be giving birth now ahead of the rains, which usually is around Easter.
Look out for baby chameleons. They tend to be brownish. At birth they can fit on the tip of your forefinger, but soon grow much bigger.
They are the cutest thing ever and great for showing kids (when they are allowed to visit! - but they will still be there after the lockdown).

If you are having difficulty finding them during the day, then do a survey at night with a bright torch. They tend to be near the tips of branches at night and are a pale milky colour in the torch light - quite easy to count.
...

If you are interested in how many chameleons are in your garden, then why not join our Chameleon survey: https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/chameleons-of-cape-town-atlas
Take a photograph of one of your chameleons (use the iNaturalist app) and add this project to the observation. If you cannot find any chameleons, then add the project to another observation (of another animal or plant) and record the number as "0 - looked hard".

Chameleons are great fun: if you can catch some flies - they have to be alive - you can hold them near a chameleon (about a body length away) and watch them shoot their tongues to catch the fly.

Beware: keep a lookout for the Fiscal Shrike (Jannie): dont go near your chameleons (or any other garden "pets" or nests) when he is around as he will be watching you to see if he can get a quick meal! Make sure that the coast is clear before you visit any of your "friends".

Posted on March 31, 2020 09:01 AM by tonyrebelo tonyrebelo | 1 comment | Leave a comment

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