Author:
Christian Keith A.,Bedford Gavin S.,Schultz Timothy J.
Abstract
One response of ectothermic animals to periods of inactivity is inverse
acclimation, or metabolic depression, which results in the conservation of
energy. Most studies of metabolic depression and acclimation have involved
temperate-zone species, and the information from tropical species has been
largely restricted to laboratory studies that failed to demonstrate thermal
acclimation of metabolism. Recently, metabolic depression has been shown in
several species of reptiles from the wet-dry tropics of northern Australia
during the dry season. We review existing data on the energy budgets of
temperate and tropical species during periods of inactivity and make
calculations of energy saved due to metabolic depression across a range of
temperatures. Because tropical species experience relatively high temperatures
during periods of inactivity, they have a greater potential for energy
savings, any enhancement of their metabolic depression is disproportionately
advantageous with respect to energy savings, and in some species metabolic
depression is probably essential for survival. Thus, we would expect metabolic
depression to be well developed in some tropical reptiles. The lack of thermal
acclimation in laboratory studies indicates that environmental parameters
other than temperature (such as food or water) may initiate metabolic
depression in tropical species. Higher temperatures, however, magnify the
energy savings accomplished by metabolic depression.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
37 articles.
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