Tracy Christopher R, Diamond Jared
Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, 53706-1708, USA.
Physiol Biochem Zool. 2005 Jul-Aug;78(4):469-81. doi: 10.1086/430232. Epub 2005 May 24.
We examined the effects of hibernation and fasting on intestinal glucose and proline uptake rates of chuckwallas (Sauromalus obesus) and on the size of organs directly or indirectly related to digestion. These lizards show geographic variation in body size and growth rate that parallels an elevational gradient in our study area. At low elevation, food is available only for a short time during the spring; at high elevation, food may also be available during summer and autumn, depending on rainfall conditions in a given year. We hypothesized that low-elevation lizards with a short season of food availability would show more pronounced regulation of gut size and function than high-elevation lizards with prolonged or bimodal food availability. Hibernating lizards from both elevations had significantly lower uptake rates per milligram intestine for both nutrients, and lower small intestine mass, than active lizards. The combination of these two effects resulted in significantly lower total nutrient uptake in hibernating animals compared to active ones. The stomach, large intestine, and cecum showed lower masses in hibernators, but these results were not statistically significant. The heart, kidney, and liver showed no difference in mass between hibernating and nonhibernating animals. Lizards from low elevations with a short growing season also showed a greater increase in both uptake rates and small intestine mass from the hibernating to the active state, compared to those from high elevations with longer growing seasons. Thus, compared to those from long growing season areas, lizards from short growing season areas have equal uptake capacity during hibernation but much higher uptake capacity while active and feeding. This pattern of regulation of gut function may or may not be an adaptive response, but it is consistent with variation in life-history characteristics among populations. In areas with a short season, those lizards that can extract nutrients quickly and then reduce the gut will be favored; in areas where food may be available later in the year, those lizards that maintain an active gut would be favored. While other researchers have found much greater magnitudes of gut regulation when making comparisons among species, we find the different patterns of change in gut function between different populations of chuckwallas particularly intriguing because they occur within a single species.
我们研究了冬眠和禁食对 Chuckwalla 蜥蜴(Sauromalus obesus)肠道葡萄糖和脯氨酸摄取率以及与消化直接或间接相关的器官大小的影响。这些蜥蜴在体型和生长速度上存在地理差异,这与我们研究区域的海拔梯度相似。在低海拔地区,春季食物供应时间较短;在高海拔地区,食物供应情况则取决于特定年份的降雨条件,夏季和秋季也可能有食物。我们推测,与食物供应期较长或呈双峰分布的高海拔蜥蜴相比,食物供应期较短的低海拔蜥蜴对肠道大小和功能的调节会更为明显。与活跃的蜥蜴相比,来自两个海拔高度的冬眠蜥蜴每毫克肠道对两种营养物质的摄取率均显著降低,小肠质量也更低。这两种效应共同作用,导致冬眠动物的总营养摄取量相比活跃动物显著降低。冬眠蜥蜴的胃、大肠和盲肠质量较低,但这些结果在统计学上并不显著。冬眠和非冬眠动物的心脏、肾脏和肝脏质量没有差异。与生长季节较长的高海拔蜥蜴相比,生长季节较短的低海拔蜥蜴从冬眠状态到活跃状态时,摄取率和小肠质量的增加幅度也更大。因此,与生长季节较长地区的蜥蜴相比,生长季节较短地区的蜥蜴在冬眠期间摄取能力相当,但在活跃进食时摄取能力要高得多。这种肠道功能调节模式可能是也可能不是一种适应性反应,但它与不同种群生活史特征的差异是一致的。在生长季节较短的地区,那些能够快速提取营养物质然后缩小肠道的蜥蜴会更具优势;在一年中较晚时候可能有食物的地区,那些保持活跃肠道的蜥蜴会更具优势。虽然其他研究人员在比较不同物种时发现肠道调节幅度要大得多,但我们发现 Chuckwalla 蜥蜴不同种群之间肠道功能的不同变化模式特别有趣,因为它们发生在同一物种内。