Growth characterization of black iguana (Ctenosaura pectinata) in captivity
Main Article Content
Abstract
THIS STUDY WAS CONDUCTED TO COMPARE THE GROWTH PATTERNS OF BLACK IGUANA (CTENOSAURA PECTINATA) UNDER CAPTIVITY IN TWO COMMUNITIES: MONTECILLO, STATE OF MEXICO (TEMPERATE WEATHER) AND NISANDA, OAXACA (TROPICAL WEATHER). TWO HUNDRED AND SIXTY BLACK IGUANA NEWBORNS WERE INCLUDED. IN MONTECILLO, IGUANAS WERE FED A DIET CONTAINING 16 TO 22% CRUDE PROTEIN (CP), AND 13 TO 25% NEUTRAL DETERGENT FIBER (NDF). IN NISANDA, IGUANAS WERE FED WITH ""TULIPACHO"" (HIBISCUS SP.) CONTAINING 21.64% CP AND 31.62% NDF. VARIABLES ANALYZED INCLUDED: BODY WEIGHT (G), SNOUT-VENT LENGTH (MM), TOTAL LENGTH (SNOUT-TAIL, MM) AND PERCENT MORTALITY. GROWTH PARAMETERS ON EACH POPULATION WERE ESTIMATED WITH A SIGMOID MODEL. THE AVERAGE BODY WEIGHT AFTER 761 D WAS GREATER (P<0.01) FOR THE IGUANAS IN MONTECILLO (232.0 G) THAN IN NISANDA (30.2 G). SNOUT-VENT LENGTH AND TOTAL LENGTH VARIABLES WERE DIFFERENT (P<0.01) WITH VALUES OF 152.1 MM AND 452.6 MM IN MONTECILLO, VS. 90.1 MM AND 204.0 MM IN NISANDA, RESPECTIVELY. MORTALITY WAS HIGHER (P<0.01) IN NISANDA THAN IN MONTECILLO (81.2 VS. 7.3%). IT IS CONCLUDED THAT GROWTH PATTERNS OF BLACK IGUANA UNDER CAPTIVITY ARE DETERMINED BY PROPER MANAGEMENT AND NUTRITION SYSTEMS, WHEN AND IF ADEQUATE TEMPERATURE IS PROVIDED IN THE IGUANA'S HOUSE.
Keywords:
GROWTH BLACK IGUANA CTENOSAURA PECTINATA
Article Details
License

Veterinaria México OA by Facultad de Medicina Veterinaria y Zootecnia - Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.
Based on a work at http://www.revistas.unam.mx
- All articles in Veterinaria México OA re published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC-BY 4.0). With this license, authors retain copyright but allow any user to share, copy, distribute, transmit, adapt and make commercial use of the work, without needing to provide additional permission as long as appropriate attribution is made to the original author or source.
- By using this license, all Veterinaria México OAarticles meet or exceed all funder and institutional requirements for being considered Open Access.
- Authors cannot use copyrighted material within their article unless that material has also been made available under a similarly liberal license.