Abstract

Rate of metabolism, body temperature, wet thermal conductance, and evaporative water loss were measured at different ambient temperatures in four lesser gymnures Hylomys suillus. Gymnures responded as typical endothermic homoiotherms to changes in ambient temperature. Below the lower critical temperature of 32°C, they maintained a body temperature of 37.3± 0.3°C by an increased rate of metabolism. Minimum wet thermal conductance was 111% of that expected on the basis of body mass. Average basal rate of metabolism was 1.04 ml O2 g−1 h−1, which represents 106% of the expected value. Within and above the thermoneutral zone, heat loss by evaporation did not account for more than 30% of the heat produced. As a consequence, the body temperature of gymnures was maintained 4°C above ambient temperature. These metabolic and thermoregulatory patterns differ strikingly from those of other members of the family Erinaceidac and can be interpreted as a result of physiological adaptation to a different ecology. Being smaller than hedgehogs and inhabiting montane tropical rainforests, lesser gymnures lack the physiological traits which enable many hedgehogs to invade hot, arid and/or strongly seasonal environments.

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