Author:
Bedford Gavin S.,Christian Keith A.
Abstract
Compared with other reptiles, pythons have a relatively low standard metabolic
rate (SMR) when post-absorptive, but metabolism increases substantially after
feeding. This study examined the effects of feeding and fasting on adult and
hatchling water pythons (Liasis fuscus). We compared
ratios of peak digestive metabolic rate (PDMR) after feeding with the
metabolic rate of both post-absorptive (SMR) and fasted water pythons. If
metabolic rate of a fasting snake is taken as ‘SMR’, then the
ratio PDMR/SMR becomes increasingly exaggerated as fasting continues.
After 56 days of fasting in adults, or after 45 days in hatchlings, the
metabolic rate of water pythons was significantly lower than that of
post-absorptive animals. Peak digestive metabolic rate of post-absorptive
adult water pythons was only 6.3–12.0 times SMR, but the ratio was twice
that if fasted (metabolically depressed) animals were used to determine the
‘SMR’ denominator. Thus, this ratio should be used with caution.
Peak digestive metabolic rate after feeding increased with increasing meal
size for meals less than 20% of body mass, but PDMR did not increase
for meals between 20% and 39% of body mass for adult water
pythons. Similarly, the PDMR did not increase signif icantly between
25% and 50% meal sizes for hatchlings. The digestive physiology
of water pythons is apparently better suited to frequent meals of relatively
small prey compared with the digestive physiology of some other pythons.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
26 articles.
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