期刊
JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY
卷 90, 期 3, 页码 761-767出版社
OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1644/08-MAMM-A-247R.1
关键词
free-ranging northern mammals; fur insulation; indirect calorimetry; lagomorph; Lepus americanus; resting metabolic rate; thermal conductance; winter acclimatization
类别
资金
- Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada's Discovery Grant
- Northern Research Chairs Programs
- Canadian Foundation for Innovation New Opportunities program
Seasonal acclimatization in high-latitude endotherms may involve increases or reductions in body size and metabolic rate to, respectively, augment thermoregulatory capacity or reduce energy requirements. We investigated seasonal acclimatization in a northern population of wild snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus) that is exposed to low food availability and extremely cold temperatures in winter. Snowshoe hares were livetrapped and transported to a nearby mobile laboratory. Hares were placed in a metabolic chamber and oxygen consumption was measured for 55 min at each of the following temperatures: 10 degrees C, 0 degrees C, -10 degrees C, -15 degrees C, and -20 degrees C. Hair length and density were measured on a sample of collected hares. Snowshoe hares maintained similar body mass and body temperature between the seasons, but average resting metabolic rate and thermal conductance were, respectively, 20% and 32% lower in winter than in autumn. The lower critical temperature was -10 degrees C to -15 degrees C in winter and 0 degrees C to -10 degrees C in autumn. Guard hairs were 36% longer and 148% denser in winter than autumn, whereas downy hairs were the same length but 128% denser in winter than autumn. Collectively, these results suggest that resource constraints associated with a herbivorous diet in regions and seasons of poor forage quality favors an energetically conservative approach to winter acclimatization.
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