To elucidate ecological effects of variation in the temporal distribution of a
limiting resource (water in the Mojave Desert), energetics of two free-living populations
of desert tortoises (Gopherus =Xerobates agassizii) were studied concurrently over 18
mo with use of doubly-labeled water. Field metabolic rates (FMR) and feeding rates (es-
timated from rates of water influx and rates of change in dry mass) were highly variable.
This variability was manifested at several levels, including seasonal changes within pop-
ulations, year-to-year differences within populations, and differences between populations.
Underlying observed patterns and contrasts was considerable variation among individuals.
Much of the variation in energetic variables was associated with a single climatic variable,
rainfall. Seasonal, annual, and interpopulation differences in FMR and foraging rates cor-
responded to differences in availability of free-standing water from rainstorms. At least
some of the differences among individuals were apparently due to differences in proclivity
or ability to drink. Tortoises had very low FMRs relative to other reptiles, which allowed
them to tolerate long periods of chronic energy shortage during a drought. Calculations
suggested that tortoises experienced a net loss of energy on their spring diet of succulent
annual plants. If so, tortoises require drier forage to accrue an energy profit, which em-
phasizes their reliance on drinking rainwater (which can be stored in the bladder and
resorbed later to hydrate dry forage). Further, it suggests that growth (as protein deposition)
and net acquisition of energy may be temporally decoupled in desert tortoises, which has
potential consequences for geographic variation in life history traits. Energy acquisition
and expenditure in desert tortoises are thus strongly constrained by the contingencies of
rainfall, both indirectly through effects on availability and quality of food, and directly
through reliance on free-standing water for drinking, which is apparently necessary for
achieving a net annual energy profit.
%0 Journal Article
%1 peterson1996ecological
%A Peterson, Charles C.
%D 1996
%I Wiley-Blackwell
%J Ecology
%K desert_tortoise energy_budget life_history life_history_strategies rainfall
%N 6
%P 1831
%R 10.2307/2265787
%T Ecological Energetics of the Desert Tortoise (Gopherus Agassizii): Effects of Rainfall and Drought
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2265787
%V 77
%X To elucidate ecological effects of variation in the temporal distribution of a
limiting resource (water in the Mojave Desert), energetics of two free-living populations
of desert tortoises (Gopherus =Xerobates agassizii) were studied concurrently over 18
mo with use of doubly-labeled water. Field metabolic rates (FMR) and feeding rates (es-
timated from rates of water influx and rates of change in dry mass) were highly variable.
This variability was manifested at several levels, including seasonal changes within pop-
ulations, year-to-year differences within populations, and differences between populations.
Underlying observed patterns and contrasts was considerable variation among individuals.
Much of the variation in energetic variables was associated with a single climatic variable,
rainfall. Seasonal, annual, and interpopulation differences in FMR and foraging rates cor-
responded to differences in availability of free-standing water from rainstorms. At least
some of the differences among individuals were apparently due to differences in proclivity
or ability to drink. Tortoises had very low FMRs relative to other reptiles, which allowed
them to tolerate long periods of chronic energy shortage during a drought. Calculations
suggested that tortoises experienced a net loss of energy on their spring diet of succulent
annual plants. If so, tortoises require drier forage to accrue an energy profit, which em-
phasizes their reliance on drinking rainwater (which can be stored in the bladder and
resorbed later to hydrate dry forage). Further, it suggests that growth (as protein deposition)
and net acquisition of energy may be temporally decoupled in desert tortoises, which has
potential consequences for geographic variation in life history traits. Energy acquisition
and expenditure in desert tortoises are thus strongly constrained by the contingencies of
rainfall, both indirectly through effects on availability and quality of food, and directly
through reliance on free-standing water for drinking, which is apparently necessary for
achieving a net annual energy profit.
@article{peterson1996ecological,
abstract = {To elucidate ecological effects of variation in the temporal distribution of a
limiting resource (water in the Mojave Desert), energetics of two free-living populations
of desert tortoises (Gopherus [=Xerobates] agassizii) were studied concurrently over 18
mo with use of doubly-labeled water. Field metabolic rates (FMR) and feeding rates (es-
timated from rates of water influx and rates of change in dry mass) were highly variable.
This variability was manifested at several levels, including seasonal changes within pop-
ulations, year-to-year differences within populations, and differences between populations.
Underlying observed patterns and contrasts was considerable variation among individuals.
Much of the variation in energetic variables was associated with a single climatic variable,
rainfall. Seasonal, annual, and interpopulation differences in FMR and foraging rates cor-
responded to differences in availability of free-standing water from rainstorms. At least
some of the differences among individuals were apparently due to differences in proclivity
or ability to drink. Tortoises had very low FMRs relative to other reptiles, which allowed
them to tolerate long periods of chronic energy shortage during a drought. Calculations
suggested that tortoises experienced a net loss of energy on their spring diet of succulent
annual plants. If so, tortoises require drier forage to accrue an energy profit, which em-
phasizes their reliance on drinking rainwater (which can be stored in the bladder and
resorbed later to hydrate dry forage). Further, it suggests that growth (as protein deposition)
and net acquisition of energy may be temporally decoupled in desert tortoises, which has
potential consequences for geographic variation in life history traits. Energy acquisition
and expenditure in desert tortoises are thus strongly constrained by the contingencies of
rainfall, both indirectly through effects on availability and quality of food, and directly
through reliance on free-standing water for drinking, which is apparently necessary for
achieving a net annual energy profit.},
added-at = {2016-01-26T08:48:09.000+0100},
author = {Peterson, Charles C.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/258d9f2341bd9424b49505779f394048c/peter.ralph},
doi = {10.2307/2265787},
interhash = {c8bfad274da1a84d3f7b3433affc40f6},
intrahash = {58d9f2341bd9424b49505779f394048c},
journal = {Ecology},
keywords = {desert_tortoise energy_budget life_history life_history_strategies rainfall},
month = sep,
number = 6,
pages = 1831,
publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell},
timestamp = {2016-01-26T08:48:09.000+0100},
title = {Ecological Energetics of the Desert Tortoise ({Gopherus} Agassizii): Effects of Rainfall and Drought},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2265787},
volume = 77,
year = 1996
}