4.4 Article

Consequences of complex environments: Temperature and energy intake interact to influence growth and metabolic rate

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpa.2015.04.007

关键词

Climate change; Corn snake; Food availability; Oxygen consumption; Thermal acclimation; Thermoregulation

资金

  1. Office of Research Services and Sponsored Programs at Georgia Southern University (GSU)
  2. Honor's College at GSU

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The field of comparative physiology has a rich history of elegantly examining the effects of individual environmental factors on performance traits linked to fitness (e.g., thermal performance curves for locomotion). However, animals live in complex environments wherein multiple environmental factors co-vary. Thus, we investigated the independent and interactive effects of temperature and energy intake on the growth and metabolic rate of juvenile corn snakes (Pantherophis guttatus) in the context of shifts in complex environments. Unlike previous studies that imposed constant or fluctuating temperature regimes, we manipulated the availability of preferred thermal microclimates (control vs. relatively warm regimes) for eight weeks and allowed snakes to behaviorally thermoregulate among microclimates. By also controlling for energy intake, we demonstrate an interactive effect of temperature and energy on growth relevant temperature shifts had no effect on snakes' growth when energy intake was low and a positive effect on growth when energy intake was high. Thus, acclimation to relatively warm thermal options can result in increased rates of growth when food is abundant in a taxon in which body size confers fitness advantages. Temperature and energy also interactively influenced metabolic rate snakes in the warmer temperature regime exhibited reduced metabolic rate (O-2 consumption rate at 25 degrees C and 30 degrees C) if they had relatively high energy intake. Although we advocate for continued investigation into the effects of complex environments on other traits, our results indicate that warming may actually benefit important life history traits in some taxa and that metabolic shifts may underlie thermal acclimation. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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