Observations and comments on the body temperatures of some New Zealand reptiles

Abstract
Rectal body temperatures (BTs) of tuataras (Sphenodon punctatus) and of endemic, ovoviviparous gekkonid lizards—mainly Hoplodactylus maculatus (=H. pacificus) and Heteropholis manukanus—were taken together with ambient temperatures during early summer 1970 in areas of central New Zealand. The results, combined with earlier data, enable a number of conclusions to be drawn. (a) The preferred body temperature of heliotherm reptiles is best deduced from the mode of rectal BTS taken in the field, but that of non-heliotherms, when unimodal, from the median or mean. (b) Among Gekkonoidea, specific thermal relations are highly variable in several ways. (c) Sphenodon foraged on cool nights at BTs of 10.5–12.5°c, yet basked in the forest by day at BTs up to 24°c; in pasture it apparently basks within the burrow entrance. (d) Similarly, H. maculatus foraged at night at BTs of 10–13°c, but by day thermoregulated at BTs up to 33°c by ‘indirect basking’ (under thin cover) or ‘protected basking’ (in crevices penetrated by solar radiation). The average BT of females was 2°c higher than that of males, presumably because many females were gravid. (e) H. manukanus is (tertiarily) diurnal, and thermoregulated by basking up to a BT of 31 °c. Towards evening it apparently cooled down voluntarily. (f) Whereas a high daytime BT probably assists digestion in nocturnal foragers, a voluntary low night-time BT in diurnal reptiles may help to conserve energy.