| Literature DB >> 29308259 |
M Teague O'Mara1,2,3, Sebastian Rikker1,4,3, Martin Wikelski1,2, Andries Ter Maat5, Henry S Pollock6,7, Dina K N Dechmann1,2,3.
Abstract
Reduction in metabolic rate and body temperature is a common strategy for small endotherms to save energy. The daily reduction in metabolic rate and heterothermy, or torpor, is particularly pronounced in regions with a large variation in daily ambient temperature. This applies most strongly in temperate bat species (order Chiroptera), but it is less clear how tropical bats save energy if ambient temperatures remain high. However, many subtropical and tropical species use some daily heterothermy on cool days. We recorded the heart rate and the body temperature of free-ranging Pallas' mastiff bats (Molossus molossus) in Gamboa, Panamá, and showed that these individuals have low field metabolic rates across a wide range of body temperatures that conform to high ambient temperature. Importantly, low metabolic rates in controlled respirometry trials were best predicted by heart rate, and not body temperature. Molossus molossus enter torpor-like states characterized by low metabolic rate and heart rates at body temperatures of 32°C, and thermoconform across a range of temperatures. Flexible metabolic strategies may be far more common in tropical endotherms than currently known.Entities:
Keywords: body temperature; endothermy; energetics; flight; heterothermy; tropics
Year: 2017 PMID: 29308259 PMCID: PMC5750026 DOI: 10.1098/rsos.171359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: R Soc Open Sci ISSN: 2054-5703 Impact factor: 2.963
Figure 1.Metabolic rate (black line), fH (red circles), Tb (blue triangles) and Ta (dotted line) of an exemplary M. molossus measured across 20 h in open-flow respirometry.
Figure 2.Metabolic rate (kJ h−1) and heart rate (bpm) of bats during steady-state minimum measures at Ta of 28 and 32°C during respirometry experiments. Violin plots show the distribution and density of heart rate (top) and metabolic rate (right) at each temperature. Note that all heart rates remained below 150 bpm.
Figure 3.Minimum torpor metabolic rates (TMRs) and minimum Tb for Chiroptera, Dasyuromorphia and Rodentia that use daily heterothermy (adapted from Ruf & Geiser [13]), and the mean 10% quantile values (± s.d.) for individual M. molossus. Molossus molossus use the same low range of torpor metabolic rates at higher Tb as other mammals that use daily heterothermy.
Figure 4.The relationship between M. molossus metabolic rate (kJ h−1) and (a) fH, (b) Tb and (c) Tdiff. In all models evaluated, fH has the best predictive fit for energy consumption (electronic supplementary material, table S1).
Figure 5.In-roost fH (open circles), Tb (blue line) and Ta (red diamonds) measured for bat 2289 across a 36 h period. The asterisk (*) indicates where the bat was released back to its roost. Missing fH and Tb data coincide with the bat's foraging period and equipment adjustment. Scotophase is indicated by the filled bar along the bottom.
Figure 6.Hourly means of fH (a) and Tb (b) simultaneously measured from bats in their natural roosts. Scotophase is indicated by the filled bar along the bottom of each panel.