How does the European common lizard, Lacerta vivipara, survive the cold of winter?

2000 
Although the European common lizard, Lacerta 6i6ipara, is among the most common Eurasian reptile species, we know little about how these lizards cope with very low temperatures. In this study we examined microenvironmental conditions, body temperature, behavior, and cold strategies to see whether strategies of freezing and supercooling, while normally considered to be mutually exclusive, may in fact be adopted simultaneously by the common lizard. Following up on an earlier study of a lowland population, this time we used a mountain population (850 m) to discover differences in overwintering strategies between the two populations. Differential scanning calorimetry conducted during the hibernation period (vs. the activity period) showed that the blood of highland lizards had an increased ability to resist ice formation, confirming an ecophysiological effect most likely mediated by physical properties of the blood. Mean blood glucose level of unfrozen L.6i6ipara in the field increased significantly (about fourfold) from 8.59 0.7 mmol l 1 in September to 33.295.6 mmol l 1 in March. The blood glucose level then experienced a significant decline as it fell to 6.290.8 mmol l 1 after hibernation in April. Glucose, in conclusion, seems to play a role of cryoprotectant rather than antifreeze. © 2000 Published by Elsevier Science Inc.
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