Literature DB >> 1613167

Warm-up rates during arousal from torpor in heterothermic mammals: physiological correlates and a comparison with heterothermic insects.

G N Stone1, A Purvis.   

Abstract

This study examines the relationship between warm-up rate, body mass, metabolic rate, thermal conductance and normothermic body temperature in heterothermic mammals during arousal from torpor. Predictions based on the assumption that the energetic cost of arousal has been minimised are tested using data for 35 species. The observation that across-species warm-up rate correlates negatively with body mass is confirmed using a comparative technique which removes confounding effects due to the non-independence of species data due to shared common ancestry. Mean warm-up rate during arousal correlates negatively with basal metabolic rate and positively with the temperature difference through which the animal warms, having controlled for other factors. These results suggest that selection has operated to minimise the overall energetic cost of warm-up. In contrast, peak warm-up rate during arousal correlates positively with peak metabolic rate during arousal, and negatively with thermal conductance, when body mass has been taken into account. These results suggest that peak warm-up rate is more sensitive to the fundamental processes of heat generation and loss. Although heterothermic marsupials have lower normothermic body temperatures and basal metabolic rates, marsupials and heterothermic eutherian mammals do not differ systematically in warm-up rate. Pre-flight warm-up rates in one group of endothermic insects, the bees, are significantly higher than predictions based on rates of arousal of a mammal of the same body mass.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1613167     DOI: 10.1007/bf00357536

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comp Physiol B        ISSN: 0174-1578            Impact factor:   2.200


  21 in total

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Journal:  J Exp Biol       Date:  1990-07       Impact factor: 3.312

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  6 in total

1.  Torpor patterns, arousal rates, and temporal organization of torpor entry in wildtype and UCP1-ablated mice.

Authors:  R Oelkrug; G Heldmaier; C W Meyer
Journal:  J Comp Physiol B       Date:  2010-08-01       Impact factor: 2.200

Review 2.  Controlling for non-independence in comparative analysis of patterns across populations within species.

Authors:  Graham N Stone; Sean Nee; Joseph Felsenstein
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2011-05-12       Impact factor: 6.237

3.  Bats are not squirrels: Revisiting the cost of cooling in hibernating mammals.

Authors:  Catherine G Haase; Nathan W Fuller; C Reed Hranac; David T S Hayman; Sarah H Olson; Raina K Plowright; Liam P McGuire
Journal:  J Therm Biol       Date:  2019-03-06       Impact factor: 2.902

4.  Defining torpor in free-ranging bats: experimental evaluation of external temperature-sensitive radiotransmitters and the concept of active temperature.

Authors:  C K R Willis; R M Brigham
Journal:  J Comp Physiol B       Date:  2003-05-23       Impact factor: 2.200

5.  Temporal and temperature effects on the maximum rate of rewarming from hibernation.

Authors:  Jenifer C Utz; Vanja Velickovska; Anastacia Shmereva; Frank van Breukelen
Journal:  J Therm Biol       Date:  2007-07       Impact factor: 2.902

6.  The hibernating South American marsupial, Dromiciops gliroides, displays torpor-sensitive microRNA expression patterns.

Authors:  Hanane Hadj-Moussa; Jason A Moggridge; Bryan E Luu; Julian F Quintero-Galvis; Juan Diego Gaitán-Espitia; Roberto F Nespolo; Kenneth B Storey
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-04-19       Impact factor: 4.379

  6 in total

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