Buttemer William A, Dawson William R
Department of Biology, Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, 48109, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Oecologia. 1993 Oct;96(1):56-64. doi: 10.1007/BF00318031.
We observed a colony of marine iguanas (Amblyrhynchus cristatus) on Isla Fernandina, Galápagos, Ecuador, while measuring local micrometeorological and tidal conditions. We found size-related differences in foraging mode, with smaller iguanas feeding intertidally during daytime low tides and larger iguanas feeding subtidally. Despite having greater opportunity, subtidal foragers did not time their foraging bouts or exploit their environment in ways that optimized their period at high body temperature. Instead, the foraging schedule of these iguanas served to maximize their rate of rewarming following emergence from the cool sea. Intertidal feeders, by contrast, showed much greater behavioral flexibility in attempting to exploit their thermal environment. We suggest that size-ordered differences in marine iguana thermoregulatory behavior reflect underlying ontogenetic changes in costs and benefits of thermoregulation due to differences in predator pressure, quantity of food and electrolytes taken at each feeding, mode of foraging, and agonistic tendencies.
在测量厄瓜多尔加拉帕戈斯群岛费尔南迪纳岛当地的微气象和潮汐条件时,我们观察到了一群海鬣蜥(海鬣蜥属)。我们发现,觅食方式存在与体型相关的差异,体型较小的鬣蜥在白天退潮时在潮间带觅食,体型较大的鬣蜥则在潮下带觅食。尽管有更多机会,但潮下带觅食者并没有安排好觅食时间,也没有以优化其高温期的方式利用其环境。相反,这些鬣蜥的觅食时间表旨在使其从寒冷的海中出来后重新变暖的速度最大化。相比之下,潮间带觅食者在试图利用其热环境方面表现出更大的行为灵活性。我们认为,海鬣蜥体温调节行为的体型顺序差异反映了由于捕食压力、每次觅食所摄取的食物和电解质数量、觅食方式以及争斗倾向的不同,体温调节成本和收益在个体发育过程中的潜在变化。