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Journal ArticleDOI

Interactions between the Environment and Ectothermy and Herbivory in Reptiles

Linda C. Zimmerman, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1989 - 
- Vol. 62, Iss: 2, pp 374-409
TLDR
The inefficiency with which chuckwallas extract energy from food may partially explain why this species occurs in hot desert climates, and this inefficiency may help to explain why all herbivorous lizards in the Western Hemisphere occur in warm climates.
Abstract
Herbivorous reptiles are a comparatively rare group of animals, likely in part because of constraints resulting from interactions between ectothermy and herbivory. Herbivorous lizards, as a group, are characterized by a unique set of morphological, anatomical, and physiological properties. Additionally, most herbivorous lizards are found in (and perhaps partially confined to) the tropics. The most northerly distributed herbivorous lizards, the chuckwalla (Sauromalus obsesus) and the desert iguana (Dipsosaurus dorsalis), occur only in very hot regions of the desert southwestern United States. Herbivorous lizards digest their food much less efficiently than nonherbivorous lizards, and digestive efficiency is affected little by body temperature. However, the rate at which food passes through the gut is affected by body temperature in chuckwallas; specifically, food passes through the gut more slowly at lower body temperatures. Throughout the activity season, free-ranging chuckwallas exploit microhabitats all...

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI

Effect of Temperature

W. Gerrard
TL;DR: A positive temperature coefficient is the term which has been used to indicate that an increase in solubility occurs as the temperature is raised, whereas a negative coefficient indicates a decrease in Solubility with rise in temperature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temperature, activity, and lizard life histories

TL;DR: A theoretical model predicting the proximate consequences of the thermal environment for lizard life histories is presented, finding that temperature, by affecting activity times, can cause variation in annual survival rate and fecundity, leading to a negative correlation among populations in different thermal environments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contributions of Microbes in Vertebrate Gastrointestinal Tract to Production and Conservation of Nutrients

TL;DR: The contributions of gut microorganisms common to all vertebrates are discussed, the numerous digestive strategies that allow herbivores to maximize these contributions, and the effects of low-fiber diets and discontinuous feeding schedules on these microbial digestive processes are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measurement and Application of Operative and Standard Operative Temperatures in Ecology

TL;DR: Operative and standard operative temperatures are thermal indices that allow single-number representations of the complex thermal environments in behavioral, physiological, and energetics studies and have proven valuable in integrating biophysical and population ecology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recurrent evolution of herbivory in small, cold-climate lizards: Breaking the ecophysiological rules of reptilian herbivory

TL;DR: It is shown that within a group of South American lizards (Liolaemidae, approximately 170 species), herbivory has evolved more frequently than in all other squamates combined and at a rate estimated to be >65 times faster.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Theory of Feeding Strategies

TL;DR: Throughout, emphasis will be placed on strategic aspects of feeding rather than on what Holling (75) has called "tactics," and possible answers to the first problem may be given to the second problem.
Book ChapterDOI

Effect of Temperature

W. Gerrard
TL;DR: A positive temperature coefficient is the term which has been used to indicate that an increase in solubility occurs as the temperature is raised, whereas a negative coefficient indicates a decrease in Solubility with rise in temperature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Investigation of chromium, cerium and cobalt as markers in digesta. Rate of passage studies

TL;DR: A new liquid marker, cobalt-ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA), and two solid markers, chromium (Cr) and cerium (Ce) mordanted plant cell walls, were investigated and Co- EDTA was found to be comparable to Cr-EDTA.