Abstract

Many small mammals bask in the sun during rewarming from heterothermy, but the implications of this behaviour for their energy balance remain little understood. Specifically, it remains unclear whether solar radiation supplements endogenous metabolic thermogenesis (i.e., rewarming occurs through the additive effects of internally-produced and external heat), or whether solar radiation reduces the energy required to rewarm by substituting (i.e, replacing) metabolic heat production. To address this question, we examined patterns of torpor and rewarming rates in eastern rock elephant shrews (Elephantulus myurus) housed in outdoor cages with access to either natural levels of solar radiation or levels that were experimentally reduced by means of shade cloth. We also tested whether acclimation to solar radiation availability was manifested via phenotypic flexibility in basal metabolic rate (BMR), non-shivering thermogenesis (NST) capacity and/or summit metabolism (Msum). Rewarming rates varied significantly among treatments, with elephant shrews experiencing natural solar radiation levels rewarming faster than conspecifics experiencing solar radiation levels equivalent to approximately 20% or 40% of natural levels. BMR differed significantly between individuals experiencing natural levels of solar radiation and conspecifics experiencing approximately 20% of natural levels, but no between-treatment difference was evident for NST capacity or Msum. The positive relationship between solar radiation availability and rewarming rate, together with the absence of acclimation in maximum non-shivering and total heat production capacities, suggests that under the conditions of this study solar radiation supplemented rather than substituted metabolic thermogenesis as a source of heat during rewarming from heterothermy.

Highlights

  • Many mammals offset the energetic cost of continuous endothermic homeothermy through facultative, reversible reductions in body temperature (Tb) and metabolic rate

  • Artificial reductions in solar radiation availability affected patterns of heterothermy in E. myurus housed in outdoor enclosures in several ways

  • Rewarming rates were positively related to solar radiation availability, with animals in unshaded cages rewarming more rapidly than individuals in partially shaded cages

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Summary

Introduction

Many mammals offset the energetic cost of continuous endothermic homeothermy through facultative, reversible reductions in body temperature (Tb) and metabolic rate. Whereas some of the evidence for basking during rewarming is indirect and based on comparisons between the rewarming rates of animals and those of black bodies (e.g., [3]), direct observational evidence has been presented for dasyurid marsupials [8, 10]. In these studies, animals were documented moving into sunlit sites while their Tbs are still far below normothermic levels (as low as 14.6°C in the case of Sminthopsis crassicaudata, [10])

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