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The influence of thermoregulation on behavioural recovery from exercise in a lizard
Authors:E L WAGNER  & T T GLEESON
Institution:Department of Nutrition, University of California, Davis, Davis, California and ,;Department of Environmental, Population and Organismic Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, USA
Abstract:1. Past work on the thermal preferences of Dipsosaurus dorsalis (Biard & Giard) has indicated that intense, exhaustive exercise causes these lizards to select a body temperature (33·5 °C) which is cooler than their preferred activity temperature of 40°C during the first 1–2 h of exercise recovery.
2. In order to test the hypothesis that the thermal regime selected by exhausted D. dorsalis is beneficial to the process of exercise recovery, lizards were forced to undergo both exhaustive and sprinting exercise at their preferred body temperature of 40°C. The peak speeds attained and the total distances travelled by these animals during these two different exercise protocols were measured and the animals were then forced to undergo a second bout of either sprinting or exhaustive exercise, following a 30–330 min recovery at either 20°C, 40°C or under a variable thermal regime which duplicated that selected by animals following exercise.
3. Animals recovering at a constant 40°C regained their ability to repeat exhaustive activity in less than 85 min, while animals recovering under the other two thermal regimes required between 85 and 100 min of recovery to be able to repeat this activity. Animals recovering at both 40°C and under the variable thermal regime regained their ability to repeat sprint behaviour within 60 min of recovery, while animals recovering at 20°C required more than 100 min of recovery to be able to repeat sprint behaviour.
4. These results formed the basis of the conclusion that the post-exercise behaviour selected by D. dorsalis retards the rate at which the animals recover their ability to repeat exhaustive exercise when compared with recovery at a constant 40°C but does not retard their ability to repeat sprint exercise.
Keywords:Dipsosaurus dorsalis            exercise  fatigue  temperature  thermoregulatory behaviour
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