Changes in gut capacity with lactation and cold exposure in a species withlow rates of energy use, the pine vole (Microtus pinetorum)

Citation
Tl. Derting et Mw. Austin, Changes in gut capacity with lactation and cold exposure in a species withlow rates of energy use, the pine vole (Microtus pinetorum), PHYSL ZOOL, 71(6), 1998, pp. 611-623
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Animal Sciences",Physiology
Journal title
PHYSIOLOGICAL ZOOLOGY
ISSN journal
0031935X → ACNP
Volume
71
Issue
6
Year of publication
1998
Pages
611 - 623
Database
ISI
SICI code
0031-935X(199811/12)71:6<611:CIGCWL>2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
Interspecific differences in the adaptive capacity of the gut may contribut e to interspecific differences in rate of energy use and life-history trait s. We tested the hypothesis that changes in gut capacity when energy demand s are elevated are similar in species with low average rates of energy use compared with a species with higher average rates of energy use. We measure d changes in gut capacity in Microtus pinetorum, a species with low average rates of energy use, and compared these with published data of changes in gut capacity of other rodent species with higher average rates of energy us e. We quantified food ingestion, daily metabolic rate, resting metabolic ra te, and gut organ masses, lengths, and functional volumes in nonreproducing , lactating, and cold-exposed females. Cold-exposed females had significant ly higher, and lactating females moderately higher, mass-independent daily metabolic rates than control females. No significant changes in the mass or length of the intestinal organs occurred with cold exposure. Length, but n ot mass, of the gut tvas significantly greater in lactating females and fun ctional volume was greater in cold-exposed females, compared with control f emales, independent of body mass. These changes in gut capacity were much l ess extensive than those reported for other rodent species. Interspecific d ifferences in gut capacity were not attributable to differences in rates of ingestion and energy need among species. A large adaptive capacity of the gut or maintenance of a large reserve capacity may be a requirement for hig h rates of energy use and may contribute to the positive interspecific corr elations that exist between rates of growth and reproduction and energy use for maintenance metabolism.