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Evidence that humidity influences snake activity patterns: a field study of the Malayan pit viper Calloselasma rhodostoma
Authors:Jennifer C. Daltry,Toby Ross,Roger S. Thorpe,Wolfgang Wü  ster
Affiliation:J. C. Daliry, Centre for Herpelology, Madras Crocodile Bank, Post Bag 4, Mamallapuram, Tamil Nadu 603 104, India, - T. Ross, Dept of Biology, Royal Holloway and Bedford New College, Univ. of London, Egham, Surrey, U.K. TW20 OEX. - R. S. Thorpe and W. Wüster, School of Biological Sciences, Bramhell Bldg, Univ. of Wales, Bangor, Gwynedd, U.K. LL57 2UW
Abstract:Multivariate statistical methods were used to elucidate which environmental factors influence the activity patterns of free-living Malayan pit vipers, Calloselasma rhodostoma. Fourteen adult snakes were implanted with miniature radiotransmitters and located a total of 887 times in 5 months. The pit vipers usually remained coiled on the ground for several consecutive days before moving at night to a new site. Partial correlation tests revealed that the frequency and distance of movements to new sites by tagged snakes were highly positively correlated with ambient relative humidity, but not with rainfall, ambient temperature or the lunar cycle. This finding was corroborated by the frequency with which active non-tagged C. rhodostoma were encountered at night, In each site, the proportion of the snakes' bodies exposed to view was positively correlated with ambient humidity, and the snakes retreated to areas with deeper undergrowth when ambient humidity was low. Overt thermoregulatory behaviour was not observed, and implanted thermosensitive transmitters revealed that the snakes were passive thermoconformers.
These findings seem lo contradict much of the current literature which shows temperature to be the dominant abiotic factor affecting reptilian activity, but most herpetologists have considered only temperate forms. Ambient temperature in our tropical study site was warm and relatively constant throughout the year (mean daily range = 24- 33°C), so the pit vipers could passively maintain body temperature within a fairly narrow range, with a daytime mean of 29.4°C. Ambient relative humidity, on the other hand, was very variable, and confining exposure and activity to periods of high ambient humidity may be necessary to avoid dehydration
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