Abstract

Hibernation (i.e., multiday torpor) is considered an adaptive strategy of mammals to face seasonal environmental challenges such as food, cold, and/or water shortage. It has been considered functionally different from daily torpor, a physiological strategy to cope with unpredictable environments. However, recent studies have shown large variability in patterns of hibernation and daily torpor (“heterothermic responses”), especially in species from tropical and subtropical regions. The arboreal marsupial “monito del monte” (Dromiciops gliroides) is the last living representative of the order Microbiotheria and is known to express both short torpor episodes and also multiday torpor depending on environmental conditions. However, only limited laboratory experiments have documented these patterns in D. gliroides. Here, we combined laboratory and field experiments to characterize the heterothermic responses in this marsupial at extreme temperatures. We used intraperitoneal data loggers and simultaneous measurement of ambient and body temperatures (TA and TB, respectively) for analyzing variations in the thermal differential, in active and torpid animals. We also explored how this differential was affected by environmental variables (TA, natural photoperiod changes, food availability, and body mass changes), using mixed-effects generalized linear models. Our results suggest that: (1) individuals express short bouts of torpor, independently of TA and even during the reproductive period; (2) seasonal torpor also occurs in D. gliroides, with a maximum bout duration of 5 days and a mean defended TB of 3.6 ± 0.9°C (one individual controlled TB at 0.09°C, at sub-freezing TA); (3) the best model explaining torpor occurrence (Akaike information criteria weight = 0.59) discarded all predictor variables except for photoperiod and a photoperiod by food interaction. Altogether, these results confirm that this marsupial expresses a dynamic form of torpor that progresses from short torpor to hibernation as daylength shortens. These data add to a growing body of evidence characterizing tropical and sub-tropical heterothermy as a form of opportunistic torpor, expressed as daily or seasonal torpor depending on environmental conditions.

Highlights

  • Many endotherms express transient periods of metabolic depression as adaptations to seasonal or unpredictable changes in environmental productivity (Schmidt-Nielsen, 1979; Ruf and Geiser, 2015)

  • We detected a mean of 150 torpor bouts of 13.4 h of duration in four individuals at the outdoor experiment, with interbout euthermic periods of 13.6 h (Table 1)

  • We recorded a monthly torpor incidence that increased in winter, but was never zero even in the warmest days of the summer (Figure 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Many endotherms (i.e., birds and mammals) express transient periods of metabolic depression (known as “torpor” or “heterothermy”) as adaptations to seasonal or unpredictable changes in environmental productivity (Schmidt-Nielsen, 1979; Ruf and Geiser, 2015). Animal maintenance costs fall to a fraction of the resting metabolic rate (RMR), providing significant energy savings (up to 95%, according to Geiser, 2020) This should be the “logical” solution for animals that cannot migrate to better environments during seasons of resource scarcity (Schmidt-Nielsen, 1979). The metabolic depression during torpor can be profound, with body temperatures (TB) approaching ambient temperature (TA) and torpor bout duration of several days or weeks This has been classically referred as “hibernation” or “seasonal torpor” (Geiser and Heldmaier, 1995; Heldmaier et al, 2004; Geiser, 2020; Nowack et al, 2020). Several species express short episodes of heterothermy, lasting a few hours or a day, called “daily torpor”

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