The thermogenesis of digestion in rattlesnakes

Author:

Tattersall Glenn J.1,Milsom William K.2,Abe Augusto S.3,Brito Simone P.3,Andrade Denis V.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, Brock University, St Catharines, ON,L2S 3A1, Canada

2. Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, 6270 University Blvd, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, V6T 1Z4

3. Departamento de Zoologia, c. p. 199, Universidade Estadual Paulista,13506-900, Rio Claro, SP, Brasil

Abstract

SUMMARYSome snakes have a feeding regime characterized by the infrequent ingestion of relatively large meals, causing impressive increments in post-prandial metabolism. Metabolism remains elevated for many days, while digestion proceeds, resulting in considerable investment of time and energy. Snakes actively adjust thermoregulatory behavior to raise their body temperature during digestion, exhibiting a post-prandial thermophilic response that accelerates digestion at the expense of higher metabolic rates. In the present study, we investigated the possibility that endogenously derived heat,originating as a byproduct of the post-prandial increase in metabolism, could itself contribute to the elevated body temperature during digestion in the South American rattlesnake Crotalus durissus. We assessed heat production, at a constant environmental temperature, by taking infrared (IR)images of snakes during fasting and after being fed meals varying from 10% to 50% of their own body masses. Our results show clearly that digesting rattlesnakes have significantly increased body temperatures, even when precluded from adjusting their thermoregulatory behavior. The feeding-derived thermogenesis caused the surface body temperature of rattlesnakes to increase by 0.9–1.2°C, a temperature change that will significantly affect digestive performance. The alterations in body temperature following feeding correlated closely with the temporal profile of changes in post-prandial metabolism. Moreover, the magnitude of the thermogenesis was greater for snakes fed large meals, as was the corresponding metabolic response. Since IR imaging only assesses surface temperatures, the magnitude of the thermogenesis and the changes in deep core temperature could be even more pronounced than is reported here.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

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

Reference58 articles.

1. Andrade, D. V., Cruz-Neto, A. P. and Abe, A. S.(1997). Meal size and specific dynamic action in the rattlesnake Crotalus durissus (Serpentes: Viperidae). Herpetologica53,485-493.

2. Beck, D. D. (1996). Effects of feeding on body temperatures of rattlesnakes: a field experiment. Physiol. Zool.69,1442-1455.

3. Benedict, F. G. (1932). The Physiology of Large Reptiles with Special Reference to the Heat Production of Snakes, Tortoises, Lizards, and Alligators. Washington: Carnegie Institute Publication.

4. Bennett, A. F., Hicks, J. W. and Cullum, A. J.(2000). An experimental test of the thermoregulatory hypothesis for the evolution of endothermy. Evolution54,1768-1773.

5. Blouin-Demers, G. and Weatherhead, P. J.( 2001). An experimental test of the link between foraging,habitat selection and thermoregulation in black rat snakes Elaphe obsoleta obsoleta.J. Anim. Ecol.70,1006-1013.

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