On my parents acreage, and everywhere that I hike nearby, the
native Northern Alligator Lizards are pretty much gone. They have been replaced by invasive European Wall Lizards, in MASS quantities around the garden, where there are rock walls, cracked cement, logs walls, and rockpiles everywhere. Excellent lizard habitat, on purpose... but pretty darn good even before that.
I was generally OK with this; there certainly wasn't any reversing of the trend, these things are here to stay. I figured any lizard was a good thing overall, and they're very entertaining company, plus I hoped they would eat the slugs!
Now I'm getting a little concerned. There are no signs of any
mason bees in the freshly cleaned house on a post above a rock pile; I think the lizards got the
local bees along with those we bought. They climb a lot more than the native lizards, and there are a lot more of them.
Today I watched one climb into an
apple tree, 8 feet off the ground, by way of a twig resting against a
fence, and catch a huge dragonfly, which I really would have preferred kept eating our massive crop of mosquitoes. They eat spiders, and all manner of ground insects, but aren't interested in the smaller pests or flying things. Never seen one eat a slug, and there are still plenty around...
On top of that, I read recently that these lizards will eat fruit/berries... and something stripped my 6 haskap bushes again this year, without breaking any branches or making a mess like birds often do. I have never tasted a ripe Haskap from these bushes after 3 summers! Same thing happened last fall with my chilean guava bushes. I'm tempted to get a berry monitoring camera!
So, anyone have any
experience with these little buggers? Do you consider them a net positive in your garden? Have you seen them eating berries? Noticed a decrease in large predatory bugs, or increase in mosquitos and other flying pests?