To warm on the rocks, to cool in the wind: Thermal relations of a small-sized lizard from a mountain environment

Publication date: Available online 10 July 2018Source: Journal of Thermal BiologyAuthor(s): Ana Sofia Buza Gontijo, Camila Santos Garcia, Alexandre Ferreira Righi, Conrado A.B. GaldinoAbstractRising temperatures accompanying global climate change are expected to affect mountain lizards. Therefore, basic information on how these ectotherms deal with their thermal environment is important for further management. We conducted a field study to evaluate how body temperature of the small-sized mountain lizard Eurolophosaurus nanuzae relates to the thermal environment. After capture, the body temperature of the lizards was measured immediately, quickly followed by the substrate and air temperatures, wind intensity, and solar radiation at the capture locations. Linear relationships showed that the body temperature of individuals was positively related to rocky substrate temperatures but negatively related to wind speed. However, air temperature and solar radiation were unrelated to body temperature. Although the substrate is an important heat source for E. nanuzae, in an open environment it can reach temperatures up to 10 °C above the maximum body temperatures of lizards, and can thus be a low-quality thermal substrate. However, individuals seemed to use wind as a cooling source to counterbalance the risks of overheating from high substrate temperatures. As the montane environment that E. nanuzae inhabits seems to have hotter temperatures than those preferred by the species, li...
Source: Journal of Thermal Biology - Category: Biology Source Type: research