3.9 Article

Motor Activity Dynamics and Body Temperature in Far Eastern Forest and Domestic Cats in the Fall-Winter Period

Journal

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 5, Pages 1381-1388

Publisher

PLEIADES PUBLISHING INC
DOI: 10.1134/S002209302205009X

Keywords

Far Eastern forest cat; domestic cat; body temperature; motor activity

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The circadian rhythms of body temperature in Far Eastern forest cats and domestic cats were found to be absent or weak in fall, but reappeared as synchronized fluctuations during the winter cold.
In three Far Eastern male forest cats (Prionailurus bengalensis euptilura) and four male domestic cats (Felis catus) with preimplanted (under general anesthesia) loggers, deep subcutaneous back temperature and motor activity were recorded in captive conditions for two months in the fall-winter period. It was found that in fall, at positive daytime temperatures, the circadian rhythm of body temperature is absent in Far Eastern forest cats and weakly expressed in domestic cats. However, it reappears during the period of winter cold in the form of fluctuations, synchronous in all animals, with an amplitude of 3-4 degrees C and acrophase in the middle of the daylight period and a minimum in the middle of the night. For comparison, the recording of the core body temperature and activity in two female domestic cats kept in the same season in the laboratory revealed no comparable rhythms. It is concluded that the rest-activity and deep subcutaneous temperature circadian biorhythms are not constant characteristics of the body of Far Eastern forest and domestic cats, but can appear, disappear and change radically with changes in ambient temperature.

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