Rb. Weinstein et Rj. Full, THERMAL-DEPENDENCE OF LOCOMOTOR ENERGETICS AND ENDURANCE CAPACITY IN THE GHOST CRAB, OCYPODE QUADRATA, Physiological zoology, 67(4), 1994, pp. 855-872
We tested a general model predicting the effect of body temperature (T
-b) on the aerobic capacity, metabolic cost, and endurance of sustaine
d, terrestrial locomotion. In the ghost crab, Ocypode quadrata, T-b wa
s a function of ambient temperature (T-a), relative humidity (RH), and
the duration of acute exposure. At 15 degrees C and 24 degrees C, T-b
was similar to T-a. At high T-a (30 degrees C to 35 degrees C) and lo
w RH (40% to 50%), T-b's were 6 degrees C below T-a. When the RH was 9
9%-100% at a T-a of 30 degrees C, T-b stabilized at 29.7 degrees C. Th
e depression in T-b resulted from evaporative water loss. The maximal
rate of oxygen consumption (Vo(2max)), determined during treadmill exe
rcise, decreased by nearly 75% as T-b was decreased from 24 degrees C
to 15 degrees C. The minimum cost of locomotion (C-min, the slope of t
he steady state oxygen consumption vs. speed function) did not change
at low T-b (15 degrees C). As T-b was increased from 24 degrees C to 3
0 degrees C, Vo(2max) decreased to half of its original value. At the
lowest walking speeds, steady state oxygen consumption (Vo(2ss)) at a
T-b of 30 degrees C did not differ significantly from or may have even
exceeded that at a T-b of 24 degrees C (the y-intercept of the Vo(2ss
) vs. speed function was elevated relative to resting rates). The mini
mum cost of locomotion decreased by nearly two-thirds when T-b was rai
sed from 24 degrees C to 30 degrees C. The reduced C-min increased the
range of sustainable speeds by nearly threefold over that predicted f
rom a thermally insensitive C-min at a T-b of 30 degrees C Endurance c
orrelated with the speed at which Vo(2max) was attained (maximum aerob
ic speed) and, therefore, was reduced significantly at both low and hi
gh temperatures. On the basis of the present study of quantified locom
otion, we conclude that thermal optima of maximal oxygen consumption a
nd endurance are caused by a true thermal effect on oxygen utilization
and muscle function rather than by a submaximal effort by the animal.