Abstract

Body temperature, locomotor activity, and thermoregulatory behavior of freely moving golden hamsters maintained in a spatial thermocline were measured over several weeks. The thermoregulatory behavior of temperature selection exhibited a robust daily rhythm 180 degrees out of phase with the rhythms of body temperature and locomotor activity. However, the parameters of the body temperature rhythm (rhythmicity, mean level, and amplitude) were not significantly affected by the thermoregulatory behavior. Although the observed phase difference between the rhythms of temperature selection and body temperature might suggest that thermoregulatory behavior is modulated to oppose (rather than to defend) the rhythm of body temperature, the absence of effect of temperature selection on the parameters of the body temperature rhythm fails to reveal the physiological significance of such opposition. Further studies are necessary to establish the physiological significance of the rhythm of temperature selection.

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