Glucose tolerance of iguanas is affected by high-sugar diets in the lab and supplemental feeding by ecotourists in the wild

Author:

French Susannah S.12ORCID,Hudson Spencer B.12ORCID,Webb Alison C.12ORCID,Knapp Charles R.3ORCID,Virgin Emily E.12ORCID,Smith Geoffrey D.4,Lewis Erin L.12ORCID,Iverson John B.5ORCID,DeNardo Dale F.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84322, USA

2. Ecology Center, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84322, USA

3. Daniel P. Haerther Center for Conservation and Research, John G. Shedd Aquarium, Chicago, IL 60605, USA

4. Biology Department, Dixie State University, Saint George, UT 84770, USA

5. Department of Biology, Earlham College, Richmond, IN 47374, USA

6. School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85281, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACTThere is great interspecific variation in the nutritional composition of natural diets, and the varied nutritional content is physiologically tolerated because of evolutionarily based balances between diet composition and processing ability. However, as a result of landscape change and human exposure, unnatural diets are becoming widespread among wildlife without the necessary time for evolutionary matching between the diet and its processing. We tested how a controlled, unnatural high glucose diet affects glucose tolerance using captive green iguanas, and we performed similar glucose tolerance tests on wild Northern Bahamian rock iguanas that are either frequently fed grapes by tourists or experience no such supplementation. We evaluated both short and longer-term blood glucose responses and corticosterone (CORT) concentrations as changes have been associated with altered diets. Experimental glucose supplementation in the laboratory and tourist feeding in the wild both significantly affected glucose metabolism. When iguanas received a glucose-rich diet, we found greater acute increases in blood glucose following a glucose challenge. Relative to unfed iguanas, tourist-fed iguanas had significantly lower baseline CORT, higher baseline blood glucose, and slower returns to baseline glucose levels following a glucose challenge. Therefore, unnatural consumption of high amounts of glucose alters glucose metabolism in laboratory iguanas with short-term glucose treatment and free-living iguanas exposed to long-term feeding by tourists. Based on these results and the increasing prevalence of anthropogenically altered wildlife diets, the consequences of dietary changes on glucose metabolism should be further investigated across species, as such changes in glucose metabolism have health consequences in humans (e.g. diabetes).

Funder

National Science Foundation

Utah State University

Utah Agricultural Experiment Station

Utah State University Ecology Center

Shedd Aquarium

Dr. Scholl Foundation

Paul M. Angell Family Foundation

Earlham College Biology Department

Arizona State University Office of Research Integrity and Assurance

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference63 articles.

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