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Don: Whew! I'm thirsty Yaël, would you pass that pitcher of water?

Yaël: It is warm in here today, Don---luckily we've got plenty to drink.

D: I've always wondered about animals living in the desert. Why aren't they thirsty all the      time?

Y: Most desert organisms have special adaptations to keep them hydrated. For      example, some can extract any water they need from their food, and don't drink at      all. Others minimize water loss by concentrating their urine and feces, or by reducing      evaporation through their skin and respiration.

D: Ooh! That reminds me! I did read about a bizarre adaptation in some lizards that lets      them drink through their skin!

Y: Drink through their skin? That is bizarre!

D: Scientists suspected for some time that these lizards were taking up water through      their skin.

     Initially, they thought the lizards were absorbing water directly through their skin, like      some amphibians, do. But unlike the moist skin of amphibians, dry scaly reptile skin      keeps precious water in and out!

     The researchers had also noticed that when the lizards got wet, they would raise their      bodies and lower their heads. Perhaps the lizards were somehow using gravity to      channel the water down toward their mouths? This prompted the researchers to      examine the skin and scales of the lizards in detail, using high-powered microscopes.      They found that two species, Australian thorny devils and the Texas horned lizards,      have networks of tiny tube-like channels under their scales, covering their entire      body. The tubes funnel water across the body and into the corners of the lizard's      mouth, where it's swallowed.

Y: Like covering your body with straws!

D: Almost. The discovery solved one mystery about how desert reptiles get enough      water.  

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Last updated: 5 February 2008
URL: http://amos.indiana.edu/library/scripts/thirsty.html
Writer: Sue Anne Zollinger
Comments: amos [at] indiana.edu
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