Abstract

The field metabolic rates (FMR) and rates of water flux were measured in two species of varanid lizards over five periods of the year in tropical Australia. The energetics of these species were further investigated by directly measuring activity (locomotion) and body temperatures of free-ranging animals by radiotelemetry, and by measuring standard metabolic rate (over a range of body temperatures) and activity metabolism in the laboratory. Seasonal differences in the activity and energetics were found in these goannas despite similar, high daytime temperatures throughout the year in tropical Australia. Periods of inactivity were associated with the dry times of the year, but the onset of this period of inactivity differed with respect to habitat even within the same species. Varanus gouldii, which inhabit woodlands only, were inactive during the dry and late dry seasons. V. panoptes that live in the woodland had a similar seasonal pattern of activity, but V. panoptes living near the floodplain of the South Alligator River had their highest levels of activity during the dry season when they walked long distances to forage at the receding edge of the floodplain. However, during the late dry season, after the floodplain had dried completely, they too became inactive. For V. gouldii, the rates of energy expenditure were 196 kJ kg-1 day-1 for active animals and 66 kJ kg-1 day-1 for inactive animals. The rates of water influx for these groups were respectively 50.7 and 19.5 ml kg-1 day-1. For V. panoptes, the rates of energy expenditure were 143 kJ kg-1 day-1 for active animals and 56 kJ kg-1 day-1 for inactive animals. The rates of water influx for these two groups were respectively 41.4 and 21.0 ml kg-1 day-1. We divided the daily energy expenditure into the proportion of energy that lizards used when "in burrows", "out of burrows but inactive", and "in locomotion" for the two species during the different seasons. The time spent in locomotion by V. panoptes during the dry season is extremely high for a reptile (mean of 3.5 h/day spent walking), and these results provide an ecological correlate to the high aerobic capacity found in laboratory measurements of some species of varanids.

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