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Warmer temperatures make invasive brown anoles more aggressive — A close up of a patch of green plants

Warmer temperatures make invasive brown anoles more aggressiveCEFR B1

17 Dec 2025

Adapted from Stacey Plaisance-Tulane, Futurity CC BY 4.0

Photo by Naoki Suzuki, Unsplash

Level B1 – Intermediate
3 min
156 words

A team led by Alex Gunderson with PhD student Julie Rej studied how warming affects aggression between invasive brown anoles and native green anoles. The research, done at the Gunderson Lab and supported by Tulane University, appears in the Journal of Thermal Biology. The team wanted to know if behaviour changes with temperature could alter competition between the species.

To measure aggression, Rej placed pairs of brown and green anoles together in controlled enclosures that simulated seasonal temperature ranges. Across these tests, brown anoles showed higher aggression than green anoles. Rising temperature increased aggression in both species, but the increase was larger for brown anoles, so the gap in aggression widened as it got warmer.

The authors say these results indicate that climate warming could tip the competitive balance further in favor of the invasive species. They note that heat-driven aggression may help explain some cases where brown anoles displace green anoles in the wild.

Difficult words

  • invasiveA species that spreads into new areas
  • nativeLiving naturally in a particular area
  • aggressionHostile or angry behaviour toward others
  • competitionWhen animals fight for the same resource
  • simulateTo copy or create similar conditions artificially
    simulated
  • enclosureA closed area used to keep animals inside
    enclosures
  • displaceTo force out or replace from a place

Tip: hover, focus or tap highlighted words in the article to see quick definitions while you read or listen.

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Warmer temperatures make invasive brown anoles more aggressive — English Level B1 | LingVo.club