Seasonal Flexibility in Organ Size in the Andean Lizard Liolaemus moradoensis
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2010-10-21Metadata
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Naya, Daniel
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Seasonal Flexibility in Organ Size in the Andean Lizard Liolaemus moradoensis
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Abstract
The understanding of animal functioning
in fluctuating environments is a major goal of physiological
and evolutionary ecology. In temperate terrestrial habitats,
one of the most pervasive changes in environmental
conditions is that associated with the seasonal change
along the year. In this study, we describe the pattern of
seasonal variation in the size of nine internal organs in
the lizard Liolaemus moradoensis from the Andes Mountains
of Central Chile.We observed that the size of digestive
organs was greater during summer in comparison to other
seasons. Dry masses of liver and fat bodies reached maximum
values during summer and minimum during spring.
We suspect that lowest spring values are related with
build-up costs of energetically expensive organs (e.g., digestive,
muscle mass) at the end of the hibernation period.
Dry mass of the heart and lungs did not show a clear pattern
of variation, suggesting that cardiac and pulmonary
performance were maintained throughout the year. The
dry mass of kidneys was greater during winter than during
summer, a result observed in other hibernating lizards
but for which there is no clear explanation. Finally,
the dry mass of testes showed a maximum value during
autumn and a progressive reduction toward summer,
indicating that reproduction occurs during autumn.
When represented in a bivariate space, acquisition (digestive),
distribution (heart, lungs and kidneys), storage
(liver and fat bodies), and expenditure (testes) organs generate
four clusters. In general terms, observed seasonal
pattern of change in organ size is in agreement with those
reported for other lizard species that inhabit highly fluctuating
environments.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
Contract grant sponsor: CSIC (Uruguay); Contract grant sponsor:
FONDAP (Program 1, Chile); Contract grant number: 1501-0001;
Contract grant sponsor: FONDECYT; Contract grant numbers:
1080072 and 1080077.
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JOURNAL OF MORPHOLOGY, Volume: 271, Issue: 12, Pages: 1440-1445, 2010
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