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1.
Physiol Biochem Zool ; 80(1): 46-58, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17160879

ABSTRACT

The nocturnality hypothesis of K. Autumn and coworkers states that nocturnal geckos have evolved a low energetic cost of locomotion (C(min)). A low C(min) increases maximum aerobic speed and partially offsets the decrease in maximum oxygen consumption caused by activity at low nocturnal temperatures. We tested whether a low C(min) is unique to nocturnal geckos or represents a more general pattern of convergent evolution among lizards that enables nocturnality and/or cold-temperature activity. We measured C(min) in four carefully selected lizard species from New Zealand (two nocturnal and two diurnal; n=5-9 individuals per species), including a nocturnal and diurnal gecko (a low C(min) is a gecko trait and is not related to nocturnality), a nocturnal skink (a low C(min) is related to being nocturnal), and a diurnal skink active at low temperatures (a low C(min) is related to being active at low body temperatures). The C(min) values of the four species measured in this study (range=0.21-2.00 mL O(2) g(-1) km(-1)) are lower than those of diurnal lizards from elsewhere, and the values are within or below the 95% confidence limits previously published for nocturnal geckos. A low C(min) increases the range of locomotor speeds possible at low temperatures and provides an advantage for lizards active at these temperatures. We accepted the hypothesis that nocturnal lizards in general have a low C(min) and provide evidence for a low C(min) in lizards from cool-temperate environments. The low C(min) in lizards living at high latitudes may enable extension of their latitudinal range into otherwise thermally suboptimal habitats.


Subject(s)
Cold Temperature , Lizards/physiology , Locomotion , Animals , Energy Metabolism , Female , Geography , Male , Oxygen Consumption
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15528174

ABSTRACT

The rate of oxygen consumption (VO2) is commonly used as a measure of whole organism metabolic rate, but requires the animal to be motionless and at rest. Few studies have measured whether animals that appear motionless are truly at rest, or whether being in a novel environment elevates metabolic rate. We investigated whether conditioning of the gecko Naultinus manukanus to experimental procedures influenced the VO2 and probability of achieving a constant rate of oxygen consumption. Metabolic rate was measured at 24 degrees C in 22 individuals until a steady-state was achieved, or for 80 min if no steady-state was reached, once a day on 5 consecutive days (five trials). Geckos in the first trial, when compared with subsequent trials, had a significantly higher mass-adjusted VO2 (0.89+/-0.06 vs. 0.67+/-0.05 ml O2 h(-1), respectively), and time to reach a steady-state VO2 (66+/-8 vs. 47+/-3 min, respectively), as well as a significantly lower probability of reaching a steady-state VO2 (24% vs. 74%, respectively). We conclude that there may be hidden inaccuracies in studies that do not condition animals and that at least one conditioning trial should be used to obtain a metabolic rate at rest for small lizards.


Subject(s)
Physical Conditioning, Animal , Animals , Basal Metabolism , Female , Lizards , Male , Oxygen/metabolism , Oxygen Consumption , Temperature , Time Factors
3.
Biometrics ; 56(2): 434-42, 2000 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10877301

ABSTRACT

Agresti (1994, Biometrics 50, 494-500) and Norris and Pollock (1996a, Biometrics 52, 639-649) suggested using methods of finite mixtures to partition the animals in a closed capture-recapture experiment into two or more groups with relatively homogeneous capture probabilities. This enabled them to fit the models Mh, Mbh (Norris and Pollock), and Mth (Agresti) of Otis et al. (1978, Wildlife Monographs 62, 1-135). In this article, finite mixture partitions of animals and/or samples are used to give a unified linear-logistic framework for fitting all eight models of Otis et al. by maximum likelihood. Likelihood ratio tests are available for model comparisons. For many data sets, a simple dichotomy of animals is enough to substantially correct for heterogeneity-induced bias in the estimation of population size, although there is the option of fitting more than two groups if the data warrant it.


Subject(s)
Biometry/methods , Likelihood Functions , Models, Statistical , Population Density , Animals , Animals, Wild , Muridae , Peromyscus , Probability , Rabbits
5.
Clin Orthop Relat Res ; (118): 188-9, 1976.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-954275

ABSTRACT

A 30-year-old patient developed bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome secondary to gouty tenosynovitis. Relief of symptoms followed removal of the tophaceous masses from the carpal tunnel. Surgical treatment is recommended whenever there is symptomatic median nerve compression.


Subject(s)
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome/etiology , Gout/complications , Tenosynovitis/complications , Adult , Carpal Tunnel Syndrome/surgery , Humans , Male , Tenosynovitis/surgery
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