Conflicts and interactions among reproduction, thermoregulation and feeding in viviparous reptiles: are gravid snakes anorexic?

Constraints on time and energy suggest that animals often will have to forgo one activity in favour of another. In the field, gravid garter snakes, Thamnophis elegans, eat little or nothing, especially late in pregnancy. In addition, they spend considerable time basking, presumably to aid developmen...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of zoology (1987) Vol. 248; no. 2; pp. 231 - 241
Main Authors Gregory, P T, Crampton, L H, Skebo, K M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.06.1999
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
Abstract Constraints on time and energy suggest that animals often will have to forgo one activity in favour of another. In the field, gravid garter snakes, Thamnophis elegans, eat little or nothing, especially late in pregnancy. In addition, they spend considerable time basking, presumably to aid development of their progeny. Apparently, therefore, a conflict exists between feeding and behaviours related to gestation. Alternatively, low feeding levels in the field might reflect reduced ability to catch food while gravid, or anorexia, attributable either to reduced space in the gut or to physiological suppression of appetite. In this study, by supplying abundant food in the laboratory, we test the hypothesis that gravid females are anorexic; we also examine the interactions among feeding, thermoregulation and reproductive condition. Typically, gravid females, whether fed or not, spent most of their time at the warm end of a gradient, as did fed non-gravid snakes; unfed non-gravid females spent significantly less time at the warm end. However, gravid snakes, even when presented with food ad libitum, ate less than non-gravid snakes, suggesting that they are anorexic while pregnant. Feeding and thermoregulatory behaviours of gravid females changed around the time of parturition (increased feeding, reduced warming rate). Comparable changes are seen in animals in the field, and are correlated with changes in movement pattern. Evidently, the tendency to eat little food is carried over into the laboratory, even when apparent proximate causes of the behaviour are removed. Although we cannot distinguish clearly between the two potential causes of anorexia, the evidence slightly favours physiological suppression of appetite. Physiological suppression of appetite while gravid would ensure that the urge to forage rather than thermoregulate does not diminish the chances of present reproductive success. By contrast, non-gravid snakes, faced with a shortage of food, lower their body temperature and reduce their metabolic costs.
AbstractList Constraints on time and energy suggest that animals often will have to forgo one activity in favour of another. In the field, gravid garter snakes, Thamnophis elegans, eat little or nothing, especially late in pregnancy. In addition, they spend considerable time basking, presumably to aid development of their progeny. Apparently, therefore, a conflict exists between feeding and behaviours related to gestation. Alternatively, low feeding levels in the field might reflect reduced ability to catch food while gravid, or anorexia, attributable either to reduced space in the gut or to physiological suppression of appetite. In this study, by supplying abundant food in the laboratory, we test the hypothesis that gravid females are anorexic; we also examine the interactions among feeding, thermoregulation and reproductive condition. Typically, gravid females, whether fed or not, spent most of their time at the warm end of a gradient, as did fed non-gravid snakes; unfed non-gravid females spent significantly less time at the warm end. However, gravid snakes, even when presented with food ad libitum, ate less than non-gravid snakes, suggesting that they are anorexic while pregnant. Feeding and thermoregulatory behaviours of gravid females changed around the time of parturition (increased feeding, reduced warming rate). Comparable changes are seen in animals in the field, and are correlated with changes in movement pattern. Evidently, the tendency to eat little food is carried over into the laboratory, even when apparent proximate causes of the behaviour are removed. Although we cannot distinguish clearly between the two potential causes of anorexia, the evidence slightly favours physiological suppression of appetite. Physiological suppression of appetite while gravid would ensure that the urge to forage rather than thermoregulate does not diminish the chances of present reproductive success. By contrast, non-gravid snakes, faced with a shortage of food, lower their body temperature and reduce their metabolic costs.
Author Crampton, L H
Gregory, P T
Skebo, K M
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: P
  surname: Gregory
  middlename: T
  fullname: Gregory, P T
– sequence: 2
  givenname: L
  surname: Crampton
  middlename: H
  fullname: Crampton, L H
– sequence: 3
  givenname: K
  surname: Skebo
  middlename: M
  fullname: Skebo, K M
BookMark eNotjz1PwzAQhj0UiRb4AWyemAic7bhuWBCq-JIqMQASW3W1z8WQOsVOKjb-OklhOunRvV8TNopNJMZOBVwIEObyGSotZ2paVRXAVMDbiI0HVAzskE1y_gCQojR6zH7mTfR1sG3mGB0PsaWEtg1N7MGmiWueaJsa1-3ZOW_fKW2aROuuxoHsVZ7Ihf41RL4Lu7DF1HR5ELahpnzFMRFfJ9wFx3PETxqyeo_vYK-P2YHHOtPJ_z1ir3e3L_OHYvF0_zi_WRRbMSvbQhtAa4UCaz054dAAVM7ICr0ho6zXeorlClfeg_a6WpUSEAUo56V3aqaO2Nmfbz_mq6PcLjchW6prjNSXXQpTSiW1UL-slGbU
ContentType Journal Article
DBID 7QG
DOI 10.1017/S095283699900610X
DatabaseName Animal Behavior Abstracts
DatabaseTitle Animal Behavior Abstracts
DatabaseTitleList Animal Behavior Abstracts
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Zoology
EndPage 241
GroupedDBID -~X
.3N
.GA
.Y3
05W
0R~
10A
1OB
1OC
31~
33P
3SF
4.4
50Y
50Z
51W
51X
52M
52N
52O
52P
52S
52T
52U
52W
52X
5GY
5HH
5LA
5VS
66C
702
7PT
7QG
8-0
8-1
8-3
8-4
8-5
8UM
930
A03
AAESR
AAEVG
AAHHS
AANLZ
AAONW
AASGY
AAXRX
AAZKR
ABCQN
ABCUV
ABITZ
ABJNI
ABLJU
ABPVW
ACAHQ
ACBWZ
ACCFJ
ACCZN
ACFBH
ACGFS
ACPOU
ACPRK
ACQPF
ACXBN
ACXQS
ADBBV
ADEOM
ADIZJ
ADKYN
ADMGS
ADOZA
ADXAS
ADZMN
AEEZP
AEIGN
AEIMD
AENEX
AEQDE
AEUQT
AEUYR
AFBPY
AFFPM
AFGKR
AFPWT
AFRAH
AFZJQ
AHBTC
AI.
AITYG
AIURR
AIWBW
AJBDE
AJXKR
ALAGY
ALEEW
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
ALUQN
AMBMR
AMYDB
ATUGU
AUFTA
AZBYB
AZFZN
AZVAB
BAFTC
BDRZF
BFHJK
BHBCM
BIYOS
BMNLL
BMXJE
BNHUX
BROTX
BRXPI
BY8
CAG
COF
CS3
D-E
D-F
DCZOG
DPXWK
DR2
DRFUL
DRSTM
DU5
EBS
EJD
ESX
F00
F01
F04
F5P
FEDTE
FZ0
G-S
G.N
GODZA
H.T
H.X
HGLYW
HVGLF
HZI
HZ~
IX1
J0M
K48
L98
LATKE
LC2
LC3
LEEKS
LH4
LITHE
LOXES
LP6
LP7
LUTES
LW6
LYRES
MEWTI
MK4
MRFUL
MRSTM
MSFUL
MSSTM
MVM
MXFUL
MXSTM
N04
N05
N9A
NEJ
NF~
O66
O9-
OIG
P2P
P2W
P2X
P4D
PQQKQ
Q.N
Q11
QB0
R.K
RCA
RIG
ROL
RX1
SUPJJ
UB1
UPT
VH1
W8V
W99
WBKPD
WH7
WHG
WIH
WIK
WNSPC
WOHZO
WQJ
WRC
WXSBR
WYISQ
XG1
YQT
ZCG
ZZTAW
~IA
~KM
~WT
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-p184t-570acc130ccfed1da7009d729af7e73cf556a4babff05f59b420aa103df2fd383
ISSN 0952-8369
IngestDate Sat Aug 17 00:10:04 EDT 2024
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 2
Language English
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-p184t-570acc130ccfed1da7009d729af7e73cf556a4babff05f59b420aa103df2fd383
Notes ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
PQID 17423251
PQPubID 23462
PageCount 11
ParticipantIDs proquest_miscellaneous_17423251
PublicationCentury 1900
PublicationDate 19990601
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 1999-06-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 06
  year: 1999
  text: 19990601
  day: 01
PublicationDecade 1990
PublicationTitle Journal of zoology (1987)
PublicationYear 1999
SSID ssj0021475
Score 1.9142166
Snippet Constraints on time and energy suggest that animals often will have to forgo one activity in favour of another. In the field, gravid garter snakes, Thamnophis...
SourceID proquest
SourceType Aggregation Database
StartPage 231
SubjectTerms Thamnophis elegans
Title Conflicts and interactions among reproduction, thermoregulation and feeding in viviparous reptiles: are gravid snakes anorexic?
URI https://search.proquest.com/docview/17423251
Volume 248
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1bSxtBFB5iiuBL0VZRa3UefKsrs5fJZn0pxSpSUoU2geBLmKsswU1Iokhe_OueuWx2jYK1L0tYMrPJno9zvpn5zjkIHcpWKhkQkYAmLREkFBasbU1kwJVmmRSZ4Fab8_uyddFLfvVpv9HQNdXS3Ywfi_mreSX_Y1W4B3Y1WbLvsOxiUrgBn8G-cAULw_WfbHzqczqmvoaSySYWTtrmmwipsavomrvDdcP2jLL2xjftsuO0C2Bm5-M-v8_HbGJksRMjd_GKOaMOM32KcvltWrChMs-DWR5ysaQLrNHb-chVdzKFoJ7vOPi0GMtfaxrtCbsdey1_p0qZ-DsEh2i9kd-3lT5lL6uUVIutRvC6sWvJUnrdKGnX4BXVfagPCy4cR64u1gtP78tDmbnN1BBUgZmQfhXWyqP8y6vBea_TGXTP-t0V9CECh2Skfz__LMqMmVZN1NVkdL-zPP22pcWXHvAiZlsi0l1HH_0rxj8cHDZQQxWf0Oq1e92f0eMCFBiMi-ugwBYUuA6KI7wMCTvKQwJG4woSuITECQZAYAcI7ACBS0B830S987Pu6UXgu2wEY1jdzwKaEiYEUBkhtJKhZCnQbglrLqZTlcZCU9piCWdca0I1zXgSEcZCEksdaRm34y3ULEaF2kZYskxJShlJBElCSTnRSqex4jHQaBi2gw7KdzcAL2aOplih4A8MQisYoOHum9_4gtYqjO2h5mxyp74CL5zxfWvUJ0wPadk
link.rule.ids 315,783,787,27938,27939
linkProvider Wiley-Blackwell
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Conflicts+and+interactions+among+reproduction%2C+thermoregulation+and+feeding+in+viviparous+reptiles%3A+are+gravid+snakes+anorexic%3F&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+zoology+%281987%29&rft.au=Gregory%2C+P+T&rft.au=Crampton%2C+L+H&rft.au=Skebo%2C+K+M&rft.date=1999-06-01&rft.issn=0952-8369&rft.volume=248&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=231&rft.epage=241&rft_id=info:doi/10.1017%2FS095283699900610X&rft.externalDBID=NO_FULL_TEXT
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0952-8369&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0952-8369&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0952-8369&client=summon