Abstract

In the present paper we examine the ability of rodents to maintain body temperature (TB) following the marked reductions in metabolic heat production associated with torpor. Previously published values for metabolic rate (M), TB and ambient temperature (TA) were used to calculate thermal conductances (C') during normothermy and torpor in rodents capable of daily torpor (11 species) and hibernation (18 species). Values of C' for torpid animals are uniformly lower than C' in normothermic animals. In addition, C' of normothermic and torpid rodents decreases with increasing body mass (BM). However, the slope of the relationship between C' and BM is almost 4-fold greater for normothermic than for torpid animals. Thus, the ability of torpid rodents to conserve body heat by reducing C' decreases with increasing mass. Rodents that use daily torpor tend to be small and they tend to maintain TB well above TA during torpor. Hibernators tend to be larger and regulate TB relatively close to TA. Thus, the reductions in C' appear to be closely correlated with the level of TB regulation during torpor. We suggest that the changes in C' represent a suite of physiological adaptations that have played a central role in the evolution of torpor, enabling rodents to regulate TB above TA during periods of very low heat production. Based on the approach used here we address the controversy of whether reductions in M during torpor are due entirely to temperature effects or whether metabolic inhibition in addition to temperature effects may be important. We suggest that the controversy has been confused by using Q10 to evaluate the relationship of M and TB in endotherms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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