4.2 Article

Thermoregulation by Bullsnakes (Pituophis catenifer sayi): do burrows make life easier on the prairies?

期刊

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY
卷 100, 期 5, 页码 303-314

出版社

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/cjz-2021-0191

关键词

thermoregulation; operative temperature; body temperature; grassland; prairie; Bullsnake; Pituophis catenifer sayi

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资金

  1. Friends of the Royal Saskatchewan Museum
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada/Conseil de recherches en sciences naturelles et en genie du Canada (NSERC/CRSNG)
  3. Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research
  4. NSERC/CRSNG Enhancement Award
  5. NSERC/CRSNG Graduate Teaching Assistantships
  6. University of Regina Department of Biology
  7. NSERC

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Reptiles living in the grasslands of Western Canada, like Bullsnakes, face extremely variable environmental temperatures, but they can effectively cope with this challenge by choosing burrows with suitable temperatures and utilizing thermal gradients for thermoregulation.
Reptiles living in the grasslands of Western Canada cope with extremely variable environmental temperatures. We studied body temperatures (Tb) and operative environmental temperatures (Te) for Bullsnakes (Pituophis catenifer sayi (Schlegel, 1837)) to address uncertainties regarding challenges posed by the thermal environments of northern grasslands, and to evaluate conflicting hypotheses regarding thermoregulatory strategies. Despite potentially extreme surface temperatures (meanmin. = 9.3 degrees C, meanmax. = 31.4 degrees C), mammal burrows remained within voluntary limits (15-35 degrees C) for 93% of the active season and created thermal gradients (up to 27.2 degrees C) which may facilitate thermoregulation by creating high thermal heterogeneity. This evidence suggests that grasslands may actually be less challenging for thermoregulation than comparable forests. Fifty-eight percent (57.8%) of the variation in observed Tb (meanmin. = 20.1 degrees C, meanmax. = 29.1 degrees C) was explained by three simple variables: time of day, day of year, and bare ground Te. Bullsnakes thermoregulated by conforming to Te near their preferred range (21-27 degrees C), selecting locations that enabled heating up below this range and avoiding warmth above this range. Our results support broad hypotheses of reptilian thermoregulation that predict increased thermoregulation when (i) environmental temperatures deviate farther from preferred ranges and (ii) costs of thermoregulation are lower due to thermal heterogeneity.

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