| Literature DB >> 32508673 |
Abstract
Daily torpor and hibernation (multiday torpor) are the most efficient means for energy conservation in endothermic birds and mammals and are used by many small species to deal with a number of challenges. These include seasonal adverse environmental conditions and low food/water availability, periods of high energetic demands, but also reduced foraging options because of high predation pressure. Because such challenges differ among regions, habitats and food consumed by animals, the seasonal expression of torpor also varies, but the seasonality of torpor is often not as clear-cut as is commonly assumed and differs between hibernators and daily heterotherms expressing daily torpor exclusively. Hibernation is found in mammals from all three subclasses from the arctic to the tropics, but is known for only one bird. Several hibernators can hibernate for an entire year or express torpor throughout the year (8% of species) and more hibernate from late summer to spring (14%). The most typical hibernation season is the cold season from fall to spring (48%), whereas hibernation is rarely restricted to winter (6%). In hibernators, torpor expression changes significantly with season, with strong seasonality mainly found in the sciurid and cricetid rodents, but seasonality is less pronounced in the marsupials, bats and dormice. Daily torpor is diverse in both mammals and birds, typically is not as seasonal as hibernation and torpor expression does not change significantly with season. Torpor in spring/summer has several selective advantages including: energy and water conservation, facilitation of reproduction or growth during development with limited resources, or minimisation of foraging and thus exposure to predators. When torpor is expressed in spring/summer it is usually not as deep and long as in winter, because of higher ambient temperatures, but also due to seasonal functional plasticity. Unlike many other species, subtropical nectarivorous blossom-bats and desert spiny mice use more frequent and pronounced torpor in summer than in winter, which is related to seasonal availability of nectar or water. Thus, seasonal use of torpor is complex and differs among species and habitats.Entities:
Keywords: daily torpor; energy expenditure; heterothermy; hibernation; reproduction; season; torpor cost-benefit
Year: 2020 PMID: 32508673 PMCID: PMC7251182 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2020.00436
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
FIGURE 1Two constructed, but realistic bouts of torpor, one deep and brief (solid line), the other shallow and long (dotted line) showing the change of body temperature over time and the respective heterothermy index (HI). Although the torpor bouts differ enormously with regard to the minimum Tb and the torpor bout duration (TBD), the HI is identical. Also shown is the torpor threshold (broken line), in this example at Tb = 33°C because the normothermic resting Tb = 38°C.
FIGURE 2The duration of the hibernation season and the number of species expressing multiday torpor during each season is shown. The data and references are listed in Table 1.
The hibernation season when multiday torpor (>2 days) can be used by birds and mammals.
| Eastern pygmy possum, |
| Long-eared bat, |
| Edible dormouse, |
| Garden dormouse, |
| Echidna, |
| Anatolian ground squirrel, |
| Arctic ground squirrel, |
| Columbian ground squirrel, |
| Richardson’s ground squirrel, |
| Golden-mantled ground squirrel, |
| Woodchuck, |
| Little brown bat, |
| Brandt’s bat, |
| Hodgson’s bat, |
| Jumping mouse, |
| Mountain pygmy-possum, |
| Fat-tailed dwarf lemur, |
| Dwarf lemur, |
| European hedgehog, |
| Algerian hedgehog |
| Greater horseshoe bat, |
| Big brown bat, |
| Indiana bat, |
| Mouse-tailed bat, |
| Mouse-tailed bat, |
| Brown bear, |
| Yellow-pine chipmunk, |
| Townsend’s chipmunk, |
| Siberian chipmunk, |
| Golden-mantled ground squirrel, |
| Daurian ground squirrel, |
| Thirteen-lined ground squirrel, |
| Alpine marmot, |
| Alaska marmot, |
| Yellow-bellied marmot, |
| Prairie dog, |
| European hamster, |
| Common or hazel dormouse, |
| Woolly dormouse, |
| Birch mouse, |
| Armadillo, |
| African hedgehog, |
| Pygmy slow loris, |
| European free-tailed bat, |
| Formosan leaf-nosed bat, |
| Black bear, |
| Eastern chipmunk, |
| Jerboa, |
| Poorwill, |
| Western pygmy-possum, |
| European badger, |
| Golden mole, |
FIGURE 3Spontaneous torpor (food ad libitum) expression (% of observation days) as a function of season in daily heterotherms. References are provided in the text. 0 = no torpor observed, n/a = data are not available for this season.
FIGURE 4Induced torpor (food restricted) expression (% of observation days) in captive and natural torpor in free-ranging (field) daily heterotherms as a function of season. References are provided in the text. In blossom-bats it is known that they use torpor in autumn, but the % torpor is not available, therefore 50% (*) is assumed. For S. macroura field data in autumn are not available.
FIGURE 5Number of species known to express torpor during different seasons of the year (from Tables 1, 2). In hibernators (white bars), the number of species using torpor changed significantly with season (Chi Square = 20.5, df = 3, p < 0.0001), but summer torpor was still used. In daily heterotherms (black bars) there was no change of species number with season (Chi Square = 0.97, df = 3, p = 0.81).
The torpor season when daily torpor is used, or is likely to be used, by birds and mammals.
| Andean Hillstar, |
| Rufous hummingbird, |
| Sunbird, |
| Black-capped chickadee, |
| Fat-tailed dunnart, |
| Stripe-faced dunnart, |
| Kowari, |
| Blossom-bat, |
| Elephant shrew, |
| White-footed mouse, |
| Deer mouse, |
| Desert hamster, |
| Spiny mouse, |
| Tawny frogmouth, |
| Owlet-nightjar, |
| Whip-poorwill, |
| Noisy miner, |
| Brown antechinus, |
| Yellow-footed antechinus, |
| Sugar glider, |
| Djungarian hamster, |