Friday, September 30, 2016

Do corn snakes need or want ultra violet light? The vitamin D question.Pete Milligan of Evolution Reptiles

Pete Milligan of Evolution Reptiles, Kidlington
For years it had been thought that corn snakes, a popular and easy reptile pet, don't need special lighting. They just need a heat gradient and a proper diet of defrosted rodents.  The vitamin D which they needed came from their diet (just as cats and other carnivores get their vitamin D from their diet).
Vitamin D is essential for health. It regulates the calcium that is needed to make bones. Studies of vitamin D in humans and birs and mammals are beginning to show that it is essential for good health in other ways, possibly playing a protective part against human breast cancer. All in all it is an important vitamin.
We still don't know for sure how much vitamin D is needed by various reptiles. Do corn snakes need it via ultra violet light? Is their diet giving them enough? Corn snakes, if they are fed the correct diet (not the mince that was recommended as feed for snakes in Ireland in the l960s!), should have enough vitamin D to survive.  But what is enough? Enough to survive? Enough to breed? Enough to flourish?
A group of scientist in Louisiana State University investigated further (see below). Over 4 weeks during which the snakes were not fed, they exposed one group of snakes to UVB radiation, and one group were kept without it. They tested the level of vitamin D in the blood. The levels of radiation were also measured.
The group without UVB radiation showed no change in their vitamin D level: the group with UVB radiation had a higher level of vitamin D. So corn snakes can and will increase their vitamin D level if they are exposed to ultra violet light.There was no significant difference between the two groups in weight at the end of the period.
So now we know for sure that, given UV light, corn snakes will make vitamin D from it, and have a higher level of it in their bodies than a level just obtained from their diet. We can no longer make the assumption that UV lighting is unimportant for corn snakes. "The findings of the present study suggest otherwise," say the scientists. This is the first step towards finding out how important it may be and what levels are needed not just for survival but for good health and happiness (yes, reptiles do feel emotion!).
Pete Milligan of Evoluton Reptiles says: "A snake will benefit from UV - at the moment there isn't enough evidence to say that it is essential."

  • The reptile relationship survey has now closed. Thank you everybody who did it.
  • *Acierno et al., 'Effects of ultraviolet radiation on plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 concentrations in corn snakes (Elaphe guttata),' American Journal of Veterinary Research, 69, 294-297

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