Webb J K, Shine R
School of Biological Sciences A08, University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Physiol Zool. 1998 Nov-Dec;71(6):680-92. doi: 10.1086/515979.
Studies of reptilian thermoregulation have tended to focus on diurnal heliothermic taxa that display overt thermoregulatory behavior, with nocturnal reptiles attracting less attention. We studied thermoregulation by the broad-headed snake (Hoplocephalus bungaroides), a small (mean snout-vent length = 57 cm) nocturnal elapid that spends long periods sequestered in diurnal retreat sites. The snakes selected body temperatures of 28.1 degrees-31.1 degrees C in laboratory thermal gradients. Prey-capture ability (strike speed and accuracy) increased at higher body temperatures over the range 20 degrees-30 degrees C. Using temperature-sensitive radio transmitters, we obtained 7,801 body-temperature measurements of 19 free-ranging snakes. Information on operative environmental temperatures was obtained at the same time. From these data, we quantified the degree to which the snakes exploit the environmental thermal heterogeneity available to them (i.e., the time they spent within their set-point range, relative to the total time that these body temperatures were available to them). Mean body temperatures (both diurnally and nocturnally) differed among seasons but not among different types of retreat sites. Inclement weather prevented snakes from attaining "preferred" body temperatures on 30% of days. However, even when preferred temperatures were available, the snakes exploited this opportunity for only 26% of the time: they remained within retreat sites and rarely emerged to bask. Nonetheless, judicious retreat-site selection resulted in snakes being within their set-point range for 60% of the time at the most crucial time of day (i.e., the 2-h period around dusk, when the opportunity to capture prey is highest). Basking may be rare not only because of its high potential costs (e.g., risk of avian predation) but also because high body temperatures enhance snake fitness for only a short time each day and can be attained over that short period without the "expense" of heliothermy. Our results suggest that precise thermoregulation may not be widespread among snakes, particularly small nocturnal species that spend long periods sequestered in retreat sites.
对爬行动物体温调节的研究往往集中在表现出明显体温调节行为的日行性变温动物类群上,夜行性爬行动物受到的关注较少。我们研究了宽头蛇(Hoplocephalus bungaroides)的体温调节,这是一种小型(平均吻肛长度 = 57厘米)夜行性眼镜蛇科动物,它们长时间隐匿于日间藏身之处。在实验室热梯度环境中,这些蛇选择的体温为28.1摄氏度至31.1摄氏度。在20摄氏度至30摄氏度的范围内,较高的体温会提高捕食能力(攻击速度和准确性)。我们使用温度敏感型无线电发射器,对19条自由活动的蛇进行了7801次体温测量。同时获取了关于有效环境温度的信息。根据这些数据,我们量化了蛇利用其可利用的环境热异质性的程度(即它们在设定点范围内停留的时间,相对于这些体温可获取的总时间)。不同季节的平均体温(包括白天和夜间)有所不同,但在不同类型的藏身之处之间没有差异。恶劣天气导致蛇在30%的日子里无法达到“偏好”体温。然而,即使有偏好的温度,蛇利用这个机会的时间也仅占26%:它们留在藏身之处,很少出来晒太阳。尽管如此,明智地选择藏身之处使蛇在一天中最关键的时间(即黄昏前后的2小时,此时捕食机会最高)有60%的时间处于设定点范围内。晒太阳可能很少见,不仅因为其潜在成本很高(例如鸟类捕食风险),还因为高体温每天仅在短时间内提高蛇的适应性,而且可以在短时间内达到,而无需进行日射调节的“消耗”。我们的结果表明,精确的体温调节可能在蛇类中并不普遍,尤其是那些长时间隐匿于藏身之处的小型夜行性蛇类。