Supercooling,ice inoculation and freeze tolerance in the European common lizard,Lacerta vivipara |
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Authors: | J. P. Costanzo C. Grenot R. E. Lee Jr. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Zoology, Miami University, 45056 Oxford, Ohio, USA;(2) Laboratoire d'Ecologie, CNRS-URA 258, Ecole Normale Supérieure, 46 rue d'Ulm, F-75230 Paris, Cédex 05, France |
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Abstract: | The European common lizard (Lacerta vivipara) is widely distributed throughout Eurasia and is one of the few Palaearctic reptiles occurring above the Arctic Circle. We investigated the cold-hardiness of L. vivipara from France which routinely encounter subzero temperatures within their shallow hibernation burrows. In the laboratory, cold-acclimated lizards exposed to subfreezing temperatures as low as -3.5°C could remain unfrozen (supercooled) for at least 3 weeks so long as their microenvironment was dry. In contrast, specimens cooled in contact with ambient ice crystals began to freeze within several hours. However, such susceptibility to inoculative freezing was not necessarily deleterious since L. vivipara readily tolerated the freezing of its tissues, with body surface temperatures as low as -3.0°C during trials lasting up to 3 days. Freezing survival was promoted by relatively low post-nucleation cooling rates (0.1°C·h-1) and apparently was associated with an accumulation of the putative cryoprotectant, glucose. The cold-hardiness strategy of L. vivipara may depend on both supercooling and freeze tolerance capacities, since this combination would afford the greatest likelihood of surviving winter in its dynamic thermal and hydric microenvironment.Abbreviations bm body mass - SVL snout-vent length - Tb body surface temperature - Tc crystallization temperature |
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Keywords: | Freeze tolerance Supercooling Cold-hardiness Cryoprotection Lizard Lacerta |
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