Effects of warm temperatures on metabolic rate and evaporative water loss in tuatara, a cool-climate rhynchocephalian survivor

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Abstract

The thermal sensitivity of physiological rates is a key characteristic of organisms. For tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus), the last surviving member of the reptilian order Rhynchocephalia and an unusually cold-tolerant reptile, we aimed to clarify responses in indices of metabolic rate (oxygen consumption [VO2] and carbon dioxide production [VCO2]) as well as rates of total evaporative water loss (TEWL) to temperatures at the warmer end of the known tolerated range; currently, patterns for metabolic rate are unclear above 25°C, and TEWL has not been measured above 25°C. We first established that metabolic rate was lowest during the photophase and thenmeasuredVO2,VCO2, and TEWL at six temperatures (12°, 20°, 24°, 27°, 29°, and 30°C) during this phase. Consistent with our predictions, we found that mass-adjusted VO2, VCO2, and TEWL increased at least 3.5- fold between 127 and 30°C (at 30°C, rates were 2.509 mL g-1 h-1, 2.001 mL g-1 h-1, and 1.829 mg-1 g-1 h-1, respectively). Temperature coefficients (Q10 values) for mass-adjusted VO2 and TEWL showed thermal dependence between 12° and 29°C but with a reduced increase or thermal independence between 29° and 30°C. There was no observed effect of egg incubation temperature (inferred sex) on the subsequent metabolic rates of juveniles. The respiratory exchange ratio implied a switch from carbohydrate metabolism at<22°Cto lipid metabolism at>27°C. The rigorous measurement of VO2 and TEWL provides a basis for future studies to predict the thermal sensitivity of tuatara to human-mediated climate change.

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Jarvie, S., Jowett, T., Thompson, M. B., Seddon, P. J., & Cree, A. (2018). Effects of warm temperatures on metabolic rate and evaporative water loss in tuatara, a cool-climate rhynchocephalian survivor. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology, 91(4), 950–966. https://doi.org/10.1086/698495

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