4.2 Article

Does torpor of elephant shrews differ from that of other heterothermic mammals?

Journal

JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY
Volume 92, Issue 2, Pages 452-459

Publisher

ALLIANCE COMMUNICATIONS GROUP DIVISION ALLEN PRESS
DOI: 10.1644/10-MAMM-A-097.1

Keywords

body temperature; cooling and rewarming rates; Macroscelidea; torpor occurrence and duration

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council
  2. University of New England (Australia)
  3. National Research Foundation of South Africa

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Torpor bouts of elephant shrews are intermediate in duration to those of daily heterotherms and hibernating mammals, but their body temperatures (T(b)s) and metabolic rates are very low and similar to those of hibernating mammals. We quantified the thermal physiology of the Cape rock elephant shrew (Elephantulus edwardii), a species endemic to high-altitude regions of South Africa, where winters are cold and wet, and tested whether it displays multiday torpor characteristic of hibernators at low ambient temperature (T(a)). E. edwardii regularly displayed torpor over a wide range of T(a)s. Occurrence of torpor and duration of torpor bouts increased with decreasing T(a). Whereas normothermic T(b) was stable, T(b) in torpid individuals fell with T(a). The mean T(b) - T(a) differential at the minimum T(b) was 0.7 degrees C, and the mean minimum T(b) at T(a) 8.9 degrees C was 9.3 degrees C. Duration of torpor bouts ranged from 6.5 to 44 h and was correlated negatively with T(a) and T(b) during torpor. Time required for the reduction of T(b) to a T(b) - T(a) differential of < 2.0 degrees C was faster for > 1-day torpor bouts than those lasting <= 1 day, suggesting that the duration of a bout might be determined at the beginning, not during, a bout. The nature of heterothermy in E. edwardii seems qualitatively similar to that of other elephant shrews, although torpor is somewhat deeper and longer in this species. Temporal patterns of torpor in E. edwardii differ from those of most cold-climate hibernators, likely for ecological rather than physiological reasons.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available