About: Varanus macraei is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2 publications have been published within this topic receiving 3 citations. The topic is also known as: Blue-spotted tree monitor & blue tree monitor.
TL;DR: The play behaviour of two species of monitor in captivity, Varanus macraei at ZSL London Zoo and Varanus prasinus at Bristol Zoo, is reported.
Abstract: P describes suites of behaviour that are perceived as ‘non-serious’. Play has proven to be difficult to define although there have been many attempts to do so (see Burghardt, 2014). Initially, play was thought to be limited to mammals and birds, but efforts to define it more objectively have led to the identification of play in a variety of other taxa as diverse as octopodes (Kuba et al., 2006), fish (Burghardt et al., 2015), and reptiles including monitor lizards (e.g. Hill, 1946), turtles (Burghardt et al., 1996; Kramer & Burghardt, 1998) and crocodilians (Lazell & Spitzer, 1977; Dinets, 2015). The widely accepted definition of play is ‘repeated, seemingly non-functional behaviour differing from more adaptive versions structurally, contextually, or developmentally, and initiated when the animal is in a relaxed, unstimulating, or low stress setting’ (Burghardt, 2014). Here we report the play behaviour of two species of monitor in captivity, Varanus macraei at ZSL London Zoo (Zoological Society of London) and Varanus prasinus at Bristol Zoo (Bristol Zoological Society). At ZSL London Zoo, observations were made on a pair of adult captive-bred blue tree monitors (V. macraei) aged 6 (female) and 7.5 (male) years. The animals were housed in a 3x2x1.5 m enclosure with a heterogenous structure including branches and artificial rockwork, a waterfall and a naturalistic substrate comprising layers of humus and leaf litter. Heating (mercury vapour lamps; Arcadia/Osram) and lighting (T5 UVB emitting fluorescent lamps; Arcadia Reptile) arrays provided an ambient temperature gradient from 25-28 °C (day), 2326 °C (night) and a diurnal basking zone with temperatures between 39-43 °C and a maximum UVi of 5, in accordance with best husbandry practices for the species (Ziegler et al., 2009). The animals were fed a variety of invertebrate and vertebrate prey; these were generally broadcast in the enclosure to allow the animals to engage in natural hunting and feeding behaviour. The animals were also target-trained using operant conditioning with food items as a reward. The enclosure had been repeatedly planted with a variety of live plants, especially Scindapsus and Philodendron, in order to increase structural and environmental complexity, as well as for aesthetic appeal to the public. At Bristol Zoo, juvenile (0.5-1.5 years), captive-bred V. prasinus were reared in custom glass-fronted fibreglass enclosures measuring 60x60x70 cm. Enclosures are furnished with live plants (e.g. Ficus sp., Schefflera arboricola, Scindapsus sp.), branches, cork bark tubes and damp refugia. The substrate consisted of humus and leaf litter and water was provided with a small 10 cm water bowl. Lighting (T5 UVB emitting fluorescent lamps, Arcadia Reptile; T5 6500K lamps, Philips) and heating (75 W halogen bulbs, Sylvania/Osram) provided ambient temperatures of 27-31 °C (day) and 24-26 °C (night), a basking site of 38-40 °C with a maximum UVi of 6.0, and a photoperiod of 12:12. They were fed four times a week on a variety of insect prey that were usually broadcast in the enclosure.
TL;DR: The Arcadia Deep Heat Projector is compared with mercury vapour lamps by recording the behaviour of captive blue tree monitors (Varanus macraei) when provided with these heat sources in succession.
Abstract: C reptiles are typically maintained using artificial heat sources. If reptiles are to achieve their optimal thermal working temperatures, and exhibit natural behaviours and physiologies then artificial heat sources should replicate sunlight as closely as possible and provide basking zones that are large enough to suit their needs (Autumn & De Nardo, 1995; Beaupre & Zaidan, 2012; Michaels et al., 2014). A wide variety of heaters are commercially available that provide combined electromagnetic radiation that approximate to the biologically relevant components of sunlight (Baines et al., 2016). Self-ballasted mercury vapour lamps are typically used for heating in captivity and emit a mixture of ultraviolet-A (UV-A) and -B (UV-B) as well as visible light and infrared-A (IR-A). Ultraviolet light is used by reptiles in a variety of ways such as recognition of conspecifics and food and the production of vitamin D3 (Baines et al., 2016). A new development, an infrared lamp marketed as an ‘Arcadia Deep Heat Projector’ (Monkfield Nutrition Limited, Mepal, Cambridgeshire, UK), emits high levels of the medium wavelength infrared-B radiation (IR-B), a small amount of IR-A, very little visible light and no UV (Arcadia pers. Comms; information on packaging). This heat source is potentially much more energy efficient than mercury vapour lamps and so may represent a more economical approach to heating captive reptiles. Consequently, we compared the Arcadia Deep Heat Projector with mercury vapour lamps by recording the behaviour of captive blue tree monitors (Varanus macraei) when provided with these heat sources in succession.