Behavioural thermoregulation of Orthopoms ornatus (Diplopoda: Spirostreptidae) in three desert habitats |
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Authors: | R. C. WOOTEN Jr. C. S. CRAWFORD W. A. RIDDLE |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biology, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, N.M. 87131, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Observations on feeding and locomotion of the desert millipede Orthopoms ornatus were made in three separate habitats during the summer feeding season. The habitats were Tornillo Flat in Big Bend National Park, Texas; the Jornada Validation Site of IBP/Desert Biome near Las Cruces, New Mexico; and the base of a volcanic escarpment near Albuquerque, New Mexico. In each habitat diurnal or diel temperatures were monitored in a typical millipede microsite. Microsites included portions of a Larrea/Opuntia shrub complex (Tornillo Flat), an Ephedra shrub (Jornada Site), and a Salsola shrub (Albuquerque). Adjacent mammal-burrow temperatures were also monitored, as were soil-surface temperatures (two habitats) and air temperatures (one habitat). Diurnal feeding and locomotion were greatest in early morning and late afternoon; nocturnal activity also occurred. Soil-surface activity generally ceased before surface temperatures reached 35oC and began again when they cooled to about the same level. In the meantime, movement to burrows, to beneath rocks and vegetation, and to aerial portions of shrubs occurred. Additional behavioural thermoregulation was manifested by horizontal and vertical movements within shrubs, maximum air temperatures encountered being 35.5oC. Such behaviour is considered in light of recent studies of water balance and metabolism in this species. |
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