For a week in the summer of 2017, Colin Donihue and Anthony Herrel hiked around the tropical Atlantic islands of Turks and Caicos. The biologists weren’t on vacation—they were looking for little brown lizards called anoles (uh-NOHLZ) as part of a conservation project. Whenever the pair spotted one of these reptiles, they measured parts of its body and took close-up photos of the bottom of its toes. Anoles have grippy toepads that allow them to cling to surfaces— they can even scurry up smooth windowpanes.
After collecting data from 71 lizards, the scientists packed up their gear and left the islands. Donihue returned to Harvard University, in Massachusetts, and Herrel to the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, France. A few days later, on September 7, Hurricane Irma struck the region. It battered Turks and Caicos with 265 kilometer (165 mile) per hour winds. Two weeks after that, Hurricane Maria hit the islands, uprooting trees and tearing roofs off buildings. Donihue and Herrel watched the news in horror.
After making sure their colleagues in the area were safe, the scientists’ thoughts turned to their scaly research subjects. How had anoles weathered the one-two punch of such devastating storms? Donihue and Herrel didn’t know if anoles had any adaptations that might help them survive hurricanes. But the scientists realized that by visiting the islands before the storms, they’d already done some of the legwork needed to find out. The researchers quickly planned a return visit. “As soon as the airport opened,” says Herrel, “we flew back out to get some data.”