The Sunning Chameleons- What are they really up to?
The myriad
ways in which nature works never ceases to amaze me. I was reading the other
day, a paper by Dr
Kristopher Karsten and associates from Texas Christian University in Fort Worth,
about the behaviour of lizards basking in the sun. The paper fascinated me with
its depth of observations.
Till now it was assumed that the lizards bask in the
sun to thermoregulate their body temperature. But latest research by Karsten
and associates has added a new dimension to what seemingly is a lazy action by
the lizards. Dr Karsten discovered that the main function of sun basking by
lizards is to acquire vitamin D from sunlight.
To test
the assumption that chameleons alter their sunning behavior based on dietary
vitamin D intake, Dr Karsten observed the behavioral pattern of two different
groups of chameleons. One was fed crickets dusted with a vitamin D powder. The
other group was fed on regular crickets and thus had low vitamin D content. The
chameleons were then placed in individual outdoor enclosures that offered open
area for direct sun, and a tree to offer filtered sun. The animals were
free to move between sunny, UV-rich areas and shaded low-UV areas. Chameleons fed on low vitamin D diet readily compensated
lack of Vitamin D by increasing their exposure to the sun’s UV rays. According
to Dr Kristen “The chameleons were as effective as mathematically possible by
our methods at regulating toward optimal UV exposure for their vitamin D
profile,”
Scientists have not been able to find out the exact
mechanism that enables the lizards to sense their internal vitamin D levels. Dr
Karsten thinks there may be a brain receptor sensitive to the vitamin d levels
which triggers the behavior of sun basking. Getting to know the intricacies of
why lizards do what they do will certainly help people who manages animals in
captivity.
Details of the research appears in the May/June issue of journal Physiological and Biochemical Zoology
|