Maintaining stable hydric and thermal states are dual challenges for reptiles that inhabit terrestrial environments with variable conditions across time and space. Under some conditions, reptiles face a conundrum where both physiological parameters cannot be simultaneously maintained at preferred levels by behavioral or physiological means. Prioritization of behavioral regulation of hydric or thermal state, and at which point this prioritization changes, was tested for nine species of congeneric tropical geckos by assessing their use of microhabitats with distinct thermal and hydric conditions in a controlled environment. Gehyra geckos were presented with two crevices of contrasting humidity levels, and time spent in either crevice was recorded across three ambient temperature treatments of 32°C, 27°C, and 22°C. Temperatures in the humid crevice matched ambient air temperature, whereas temperature in the dry crevice was maintained at 32°C. In these trials, all species showed greater use of the dry (and warm) crevice in the 27°C and 22°C treatments, while there was no strong preference for the humid or dry crevice in the 32°C treatment. Thus, Gehyra geckos prioritized thermoregulation and maintained thermal state through behavioral responses, and humid microhabitats were not selected even when it did not compromise the animal's thermal state. Although selection for preferred thermal conditions was prioritized in the short term, this does not preclude the possibility that hydric state can be regulated on a seasonal time scale.
Keywords: Gehyra; geckos; hydroregulation; reptile; thermoregulation.
© 2024 The Author(s). Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Ecological and Integrative Physiology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.