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Famine reveals incredible shrinking iguanas.


Marine iguanas in the Galapagos Islands are the first vertebrates shown to shorten and then regrow Re`grow´   

v. i. & t. 1. To grow again.
The snail had power to regrow them all [horns, tongue, etc.]
- A. B. Buckley.

Verb 1.
, say researchers in the United States and Germany.

The seagoing reptiles shrank by as much as 20 percent during a 2-year food shortage inflicted by El Nino, says Martin Wikelski of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Early years: 1867-1880
The Morrill Act of 1862 granted each state in the United States a portion of land on which to establish a major public state university, one which could teach agriculture, mechanic arts, and military training, "without excluding other scientific
. In the Jan. 6 NATURE, he and Corinna Thom of the University of Wurzburg in Germany describe observations of some 6,000 Amblyrhynchus cristatus during four El Ninos. They report reversible shortening in more than 100 individuals.

People certainly shrink as aging bones lose calcium, and doctors would love to reverse this symptom of osteoporosis. Iguanas might hold that secret, according to Wikelski. The size of the reptilian changes that he observed requires that the bones themselves shrink and then lengthen, he calculates. If connective tissue alone shriveled shriv·el  
intr. & tr.v. shriv·eled or shriv·elled, shriv·el·ing or shriv·el·ling, shriv·els
1. To become or make shrunken and wrinkled, often by drying:
, the animals could shorten only by about 10 percent.

He first dismissed the apparent shrinkage as goofs in measurement. "We didn't believe our own data for 18 years," Wikelski says. He reconsidered his position when the researchers noticed that the length decreases correlated with El Ninos, ocean warmings that thin out marine algal algal

pertaining to or caused by algae.


algal infection
is very rare but systemic and udder infections are recorded. See protothecosis.

algal mastitis
the algae Prototheca trispora and P.
 beds where the iguanas swim and graze. Moreover, the length of some iguanas' bodies, the herpetologists' traditional "snout-to-vent length," dropped as much as 6.8 centimeters. "That is way beyond any measurement error," Wikelski claims.

The risk of error has stymied other researchers who have wondered whether animals shrink, according to Judy Stamps of the University of California, Davis The University of California, Davis, commonly known as UC Davis, is one of the ten campuses of the University of California, and was established as the University Farm in 1905. . She recalls data on lizards and salamanders that seemed to suggest shrinkage. "Most people have seen it, and most people have ignored it as a measurement mistake," she says. However, the iguana iguana (ĭgwä`nə), name for several large lizards of the family Iguanidae, found in tropical America and the Galapagos. The common iguana (Iguana iguana  changes look too big to ignore, she adds.

Ken Nagy of the University of California, Los Angeles UCLA comprises the College of Letters and Science (the primary undergraduate college), seven professional schools, and five professional Health Science schools. Since 2001, UCLA has enrolled over 33,000 total students, and that number is steadily rising.  echoes Stamps. In desert reptiles, "I see hints of de-growing, but usually it's so small," he says. Species littler or wigglier than marine iguanas haven't made good test cases. "It's always pretty iffy to measure the length of a snake," Nagy notes.

Howard L. Snell of the University of New Mexico The University of New Mexico (UNM) is a public university in Albuquerque, New Mexico. It was founded in 1889. It also offers multiple bachelor's, master's, doctoral, and professional degree programs in all areas of the arts, sciences, and engineering.  in Albuquerque says he finds growth anomalies in Galapagos land iguanas but remains cautious about shrinkage. "I have to admit that I'm not completely convinced," Snell says. "Martin's interpretation of the observations could be correct," he adds but suggests that only X rays will resolve the question.

Shortening could help iguanas eke out an existence in El Nino years, Wikelski speculates. During 1992-1993, he found that among big adults, the iguanas that shrank more lived longer.

Nagy hesitates to call shrinkage adaptive. He's found that marine iguana adults expend less than 10 percent of their daily energy diving for food. So, he questions whether shrinking would boost foraging efficiency and trim nutritional needs enough to matter. Shrinking is just a result of starvation, he speculates.

The big males may be shrinking most because of their mating habits, suggests Brian Henen of California State University, Northridge CSUN offers a variety of programs leading to bachelor's degrees in 61 fields and master's degrees in 42 fields. The university has over 150,000 alumni. It's also home to a summer musical theater/theater program known as TADW (TeenAge Drama Workshop) that leads teenagers through an . The real hulks spend several weeks defending territories where females cruise. Defense doesn't allow big guys much, if any, chance to swim away to feed. Small males don't bother with real estate and spend more time eating.

The question of shrinking might never have gotten serious thought if Wikelski's team hadn't built up so many years of data, muses Gordon M. Burghardt of the University of Tennessee The University of Tennessee (UT), sometimes called the University of Tennessee at Knoxville (UT Knoxville or UTK), is the flagship institution of the statewide land-grant University of Tennessee public university system in the American state of Tennessee.  at Knoxville. He grumbles, "Such studies are typically not valued highly enough to fund by governments or foundations, but they have the potential to unlock many secrets."
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Galapagos Islands
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Jan 8, 2000
Words:592
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