| Literature DB >> 26870151 |
A L Evans1, N J Singh2, A Friebe3, J M Arnemo1, T G Laske4, O Fröbert5, J E Swenson6, S Blanc7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hibernation has been a key area of research for several decades, essentially in small mammals in the laboratory, yet we know very little about what triggers or ends it in the wild. Do climatic factors, an internal biological clock, or physiological processes dominate? Using state-of-the-art tracking and monitoring technology on fourteen free-ranging brown bears over three winters, we recorded movement, heart rate (HR), heart rate variability (HRV), body temperature (Tb), physical activity, ambient temperature (TA), and snow depth to identify the drivers of the start and end of hibernation. We used behavioral change point analyses to estimate the start and end of hibernation and convergent cross mapping to identify the causal interactions between the ecological and physiological variables over time.Entities:
Keywords: Body temperature; Denning ecology; Metabolic inhibition; Physiological ecology; Thermoregulation
Year: 2016 PMID: 26870151 PMCID: PMC4750243 DOI: 10.1186/s12983-016-0140-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Zool ISSN: 1742-9994 Impact factor: 3.172
Fig. 2The relationship between physiological parameters of brown bears in Sweden and the dates of den entry and exit indicated by time zero. The data have been aligned to the date of den entry and exit (blue vertical line) to determine the sequence of physiological a: body temperature; b: Activity; c: heart rate; d: SDANN, and environmental e: Ambient temperature; f: Snow levels events. The red lines indicate when the variable began to decrease during den entry and increase during den exit, with the number of days from the entry/exit indicated. This is based on generalized additive mixed models (GAMMs). The gray points indicate the daily average value for each of the 14 individuals
Cross Convergent Mapping (11) analyses of the causation between different ecophysiological variables. Standard deviation of all the five-minutes normal heart beat interval means (SDANN), heart rate (HR), ambient temperature (TA), and body temperature (Tb). The library length of the association ‘L’ was set to 100 for all analyses and ρ is the range of Pearson correlation coefficients for the tested relationship during the defined period (Column 1)
| Period | Decription | Relationship tested |
| ρ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Period 1 | From 25 days before den entry (the day activity starts to drop) until den entry | SDANN causes HR | 0.1 | 0.1–0.7 |
| Period 2 | 30 days following the date of den entry | SDANN causes Tb | 0.05 | 0.8–0.9 |
| Period 2 | 30 days following the date of den entry | TA causes Tb | 0.1 | 0.3–0.4 |
| Period 3 | Between 63 to 25 days before the date of den exit | TA causes Tb | 0.06 | 0.7–0.8 |
| Period 3 | Between 63 to 25 days before the date of den exit | SDANN causes Tb | 0.9 | 0.1–0.5 |
| Period 3 | Between 63 to 25 days before the date of den exit | Tb drives HR | 0.07 | |
| Period 4 | From 25 days before den exit to the den exit date | SDANN causes Tb | 0.01 | 0.2–0.8 |
| Period 4 | From 25 days before den exit to the den exit date | SDANN causes HR | 0.03 | 0.3–0.8 |
| Period 4 | From 25 days before den exit to the den exit date | TA causes Tb | 0.3 | 0.1–0.4 |
| Period 5 | From 10 days before den exit to the den exit date | Activity causes Tb | 0.05 | 0.5–0.8 |
Fig. 1Average of the daily mean values for ambient temperature (a) bear body temperature (b), heart rate (c) and activity level in accelerometry units (d) for 14 individual free-ranging brown bears in central Sweden collected over 3 years. The X-axis indicates the time of year. Green vertical bars indicate the den entry and exit periods. The width of the green bars denotes the range of den entry and exit dates across all individuals. Trend lines were calculated using GAMMs
Fig. 3Chronology of physiological events (average change points calculated by GAMMs and shown in Fig. 2) superimposed on abiotic parameters during the annual cycle of brown bears in Sweden. The numbers below the X axis represent the sequence of events preceding den entry (black circles) and the sequence of variables reaching winter levels (open circles). For den exit, the numbers indicate the sequence of the variables beginning their transition to summer levels (black circles) and the end of the transition to the active period (open circles). Den entry occurred when the ambient temperature average was close to 1 °C, shortly after the first snowfall. Den entry occurred when ambient temperature was around °C, although body temperature (Tb) began increasing long before the heart rate (HR), SDANN and physical activity began