Licht-im-Terrarium: Literaturdatenbank |
Ferguson, G. W., Gehrmann, W. H., Vaughan, M. S., Kroh, G. C., Chase, D., & Slaets, K., et al. (2021). Is the natural uv zone important for successful captive propagation of the panther chameleon (furcifer pardalis); are different uvb irradiance exposures that generate a similar dose equally successful? Zoo Biology, Added by: Sarina (2021-02-13 13:46:04) |
Resource type: Journal Article DOI: 10.1002/zoo.21591 ID no. (ISBN etc.): 0733-3188 BibTeX citation key: Ferguson2021 View all bibliographic details |
Categories: Englisch = English Creators: Chase, Ferguson, Gehrmann, Holick, Kroh, Slaets, Vaughan Collection: Zoo Biology |
Views: 1/458 Views index: % Popularity index: 1.75% |
Abstract |
While we generally understand the optimal ultraviolet B (UVB) environment for the growth and reproduction of female Panther Chameleons Furcifer pardalis, we do not know the relative importance of UVB irradiance and dose for optimal husbandry outcomes. Accordingly, we experimented with Panther Chameleon females to test the hypothesis that UVB dose (irradiance × exposure duration) determines the outcome, regardless of the combination of UVB irradiance and exposure duration generating the dose. We varied UVB irradiance and exposure duration across treatment groups while keeping dose similar and within a range previously documented to result in reproductive success. The growth rate, age of maturity, and measurable vitamin D status were not significantly different among the treatment groups. Individuals in all groups produced viable eggs that successfully hatched. Thus, we found some support for the hypothesis that the UVB dose determines the outcome regardless of UVB irradiance. However, mean egg vitamin D<sub>3</sub> concentration and percent hatching were higher in the highest UVB irradiance group, despite similar doses among the three groups. Preliminary field data reveal that this species occupies UV irradiance Zone 4 in Madagascar, the highest zone for reptiles recorded. Only the irradiance of the high UVB irradiance group in our experiment approached this zone and resulted in the best reproductive success. Biosynthesis of vitamin D<sub>3</sub> and provisioning to eggs is more efficient when exposure to UVB irradiance is similar to that in their natural environment. Establishing an optimal UVB environment, based on knowledge of the natural UVB environment, is important for the propagation of Panther Chameleons in captivity.
Added by: Sarina |