Artículos de revistas
The effect of short- and long-term fasting on digestive and metabolic flexibility in the Andean toad, Bufo spinulosus
Fecha
2009Registro en:
Journal of Experimental Biology, Volumen 212, Issue 14, 2018, Pages 2167-2175
00220949
10.1242/jeb.030650
Autor
Naya, Daniel E.
Veloso Iriarte, Claudio
Sabat Opazo, Pablo
Bozinovic, Francisco
Institución
Resumen
Hibernation in ectothermic animals was historically considered as a simple cold-induced torpor state resulting from the inability to maintain a high body temperature at low ambient temperatures. During the last decades this vision changed and nowadays there is a myriad of studies showing that hibernation implies different adjustments at the genetic, molecular, biochemical and cellular levels. However, studies oriented to evaluate changes of whole organism structure and physiology still are scarce, which is particularly true for amphibians that hibernate on land. Accordingly, in the Andean toad (Bufo spinulosus), we investigated the effect of short-term fasting and hibernation on the hydrolytic activity of digestive enzymes, histology of the small intestine, gross morphology of digestive and other internal organs and standard metabolic rate. Based on the pattern of size variation, internal organs may be grouped into those that were affected by both season and feeding condition (small in