4.2 Article

Wiping behavior, skin resistance, and the metabolic response to dehydration in the arboreal frog Phyllomedusa hypochondrialis

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL ZOOLOGY
Volume 79, Issue 6, Pages 1058-1068

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/507659

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Several species of arboreal frogs secrete lipids from cutaneous glands and wipe these secretions over the body surfaces to reduce evaporative water losses. Following wiping, frogs become immobile in water-conserving postures, and some have suggested they are torpid. Here we report wiping behaviors and the physiological correlates of immobile postures in the arboreal monkey frog Phyllomedusa hypochondrialis. Skin resistance to water loss was comparatively high, and rates of evaporation were as low as 4% of that from a free water surface. Standard rates of metabolism (SMR) varied from 89 mu L O-2 h(-1) at 18 degrees C to 316 mu L O(2)h(-1) at 34 degrees C and were sensitive to both temperature (T) and body mass (W; mL O-2 h(-1) = 0.016W(0.642) x 10(0.0307)). The mean SMR did not change significantly during four consecutive days of dehydration when animals lost 19%-34% of body mass. Therefore, it appears these frogs do not routinely depress metabolic rates following wiping. However, some individuals that lost higher percentages of body water exhibited trends of decreasing oxygen consumption, suggesting that suppression of metabolic rates might occur at greater levels of body water deficit or perhaps during a slower course of dehydration than imposed by our experiments ( e. g., individuals that are secluded during periods of drought).

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