Vol. 52, 2013
Specific dynamic action, postprandial thermophily, and the
impact of temperature on gastric digestion in the cornsnake Pantherophis guttatus
Lynnette
M Sievert*, Yusuke Suita, Daphne M Mayes, Lynett R Bontrager, Michelle
Tuttle and Ashley Everly
Department
of Biological Sciences, Emporia State University, Emporia, KS 66801, USA
Abstract
Background: The purpose of this
work was to study the role of feeding on the energetics of cornsnakes.
Results: We measured oxygen consumption in
cornsnakes prior to a meal and 6, 15, 20, 30, 40, 48, 72, and 96 h
after eating a meal that was equivalent to 10% of the snake's body
mass. We monitored temperature selection of individual cornsnakes in a
thermal gradient in the spring and again in the fall when snakes were
starved, digesting a meal equivalent to 10% of its body mass, and
digesting a meal equivalent to 25% of its body mass. We measured the
gastric digestion rate by monitoring the passage of magnetic stir bars,
placed inside a mouse meal, through the digestive tracts of cornsnakes
maintained at 22°C, 25°C, 28°C, and 32°C.
Conclusions: Oxygen consumption
peaked at 2.3 times higher than baseline levels 24 h after feeding and
had returned to pre-feeding levels by 72 h. Meal size affected
temperature selection in both seasons; in fall, starved snakes selected
lower body temperatures than fed snakes, but meal size had no effect on
temperature selection by fed snakes. Passage rates from the stomach to
the intestine did not significantly differ among the temperatures
studied.
Key words: Energetics; Snake; Thermophily;
Digestion.
*Correspondence: E-mail: lsievert@emporia.edu
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