4.1 Article

Social thermoregulation in least shrews, Cryptotis parva

Journal

MAMMALIA
Volume 78, Issue 1, Pages 11-22

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/mammalia-2012-0112

Keywords

Crocidurinae; Cryptotis; huddling; resting metabolic rate; social thermoregulation.

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Cryptotis parva exhibits a geographic range and ecological requirements unique among North American soricines: it possesses a latitudinal distribution, metabolism and communal nesting pattern more like the crocidurines of the eastern hemisphere. We utilized oxygen consumption (VO2) techniques to examine metabolic shifts and video to document activity patterns and dynamics of solitary and group nesting C. parva. Between ambient temperatures of 4 degrees C and 34 degrees C, solitary C. parva demonstrated an inverse relationship between ambient temperature (T-a) and resting metabolic rate (RMR); thermal neutral zone (TNZ) was very narrow, between a T-a of 34 degrees C and 36 degrees C. VO2 was measured in groups ranging in size from one to eight at T(a)s of 4 degrees C, 14 degrees C, 24 degrees C and 34 degrees C. The group size had a significant effect on the median RMR and median predicted Kleiber value and was more effective at reducing metabolic cost at a lower T-a. In a second experiment designed to assess the effects of huddling group size and incubator T-a on the T-a of the nest chamber, both had significant effects. Group size had significant effects on the T-a of the nest chamber at incubator temperatures of 5 degrees C, 10 degrees C, 15 degrees C and 32 degrees C, but not at 25 degrees C. We found no behavioral or physiologic evidence of heterothermy.

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