跳到内容
Northern Pacific Rattlesnakes (Crotalus viridis oreganus) Meter Venom When Feeding on Prey of Different Sizes
关闭预览资料

Northern Pacific Rattlesnakes (Crotalus viridis oreganus) Meter Venom When Feeding on Prey of Different Sizes

著者: William K Hayes; Pablo Lavín-Murcio; Kenneth V Kardong
版本/格式: 文章 文章 : 英语
刊登在:Copeia, May 3, 1995, vol. 1995, no. 2, p. 337-343
数据库:JSTOR
其它数据库: ArticleFirst
提要:
 再读一些...
评估:

(尚未评估) 0 附有评论 - 争取成为第一个。

 

在线查找

与期刊/刊物的链接

在图书馆查找

正在检索... 正在查找有这资料的图书馆...

详细书目

文件类型: 文章
所有的著者/提供者: William K Hayes; Pablo Lavín-Murcio; Kenneth V Kardong
ISSN:0045-8511
OCLC号码: 483902862
语言注释: English
奖励:

摘要:

The purpose of this study was to clarify experimentally whether northern Pacific rattlesnakes (Crotalus viridis oreganus) inject more venom into larger prey than into smaller prey. Medium-sized and large rattlesnakes were videotaped as they each struck small and large laboratory mice (Mus musculus). Venom measurements were made by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) of whole-animal homogenate. Although medium and large snakes expended similar quantities of venom, both groups injected significantly more venom into large mice than into small mice. Slow-motion videotape analyses indicated that behavioral aspects of striking were similar for medium and large snakes and did not differ between size classes of prey. Likewise, no behavioral aspect of striking was correlated with the quantity of venom expended. Thus, venom expenditure was not a consequence of or constrained by some extrinsic aspect of striking such as duration of fang contact. Instead, the rattlesnakes metered more venom into larger prey through intrinsic control of venom delivery. Because of the predatory advantages for quick death and efficient digestion of larger prey, injection of more venom into larger prey is likely an adaptive strategy.

评论

用户提供的评论
正在检索weRead中的评论...
正在获取GoodReads评论...
正在检索Amazon中的评论...

标签

争取是第一个!
确认申请

您可能已经申请过这份资料。如果还是想申请,请选确认。

关闭窗口

请登入WorldCat 

没有张号吗?很容易就可以 建立免费的账号.