11/30/09 SI A Ecl 365
Behavioral adaptations to environments
- What is torpor?
- Physiological state in which energy expenditure is greatly reduced by decreasing body temperature and rate of metabolism
- When does Torpor occur?
- Occurs when environmental conditions exceed an individual’s capacity for homeostasis
- (e.g., harsh climate or food/water shortage)
- What is another term for torpor?
- Dormancy
- What vertebrates become torpid (or dormant)?
- Regular cycles of dormancy are major features of herp lifestyles, especially in extreme environments.
- Among endotherms, many small to medium-sized mammals and some birds abandon homeothermy daily or seasonally
- How are ectotherm and endotherm torpor different?
- Ectotherms do not regulate body temperature during torpor and cannot awake (arouse)
- Endotherms regulate body temperature during torpor (albeit at low levels) and can awake (arouse)
- The types of torpor are ______torpor and ______torpor.
- Daily and seasonal.
- How often can daily torpor occur?
- Daily…. Everyday
- What are two types of seasonal torpor?
- Hibernation (winter)
- Estivation (summer)
- How is daily torpor beneficial?
- Saves energy during the inactive period of the day
- Lasts only a few hours
- What types (size, class) animals experience daily torpor?
- Small mammals and small birds
- Why do small mammals / birds utilize daily torpor?
- Fast use of energy/poor reserves
- Variable food (insects, nectar) resources
- In daily torpor, the body temperature falls _____ - ______C below the animal’s ______normal temperature. Also, oxygen consumption is less than ______to ______of the normal consumption rate.
- 5-15C below normal temp., 1/3 to 1/40
- Describe what happens during winter torpor or hibernation.
- Body temperature (Tb) can be reduced to within 1 degree or less of ambient temperature (Ta)
- O2 consumption markedly reduced
- Heart rate markedly reduced
- Prolonged periods of breathing apnea
- Body slows down much more than in sleep
- What is the only known avian hibernator?
- Common Poorwill
- What types of mammals hibernate?
- Carnivores (bears, badgers)
- Rodents (many --e.g., woodchucks, chipmunks, ground squirrels, dormouse, hamsters)
- Insectivores (e.g., African shrews, golden moles)
- NA bats: some species (7+) migrate; others (9+) hibernate
- Smaller marsupials
- What factors induce hibernation?
- Cold weather
- Low food supply
- Increased fat
- Increased serum magnesium levels
- Change in respiratory control center sensitivity to CO2
- Describe the three steps to entering hibernation.
- 1. decrease in heart rate & breathing rate
- 2. drop in oxygen consumption
- 3. drop of body temp
- True / False A sudden drop in temperature results in deeper torpor in hibernating species.
- False – they wake up
- At what temperature are arctic ground squirrels either frozen or awake?
- -15C
- True / False Hibernation is a continuous torpid state for months.
- False – there are periodic arousal periods
- True / FalseIn all mammals that hibernate, arousal takes about the same time.
- False – time needed differs among species – larger take longer, etc.
- Hibernation arousal is an ______process involving a high rate of ______production. ______fat tissue generates heat during the early stages of arousal.
- Active, heat, brown
- What are the stages of hibernation arousal (3)?
- Increase in heart rate
- Increase metabolism
- Reset temperature regulating mechanism
- Since arousal from hibernation takes a lot of energy (it is equivalent to the energy used in ~10 days of hibernation), why do animals “wake-up?”
- Eliminate build-up of N wastes
- Restore water lost by evaporation
- Fat storage depletion
- Where do herps usually spend winter?
- A place where Ta will not dip below freezing
- Bottom of lakes usually 4 C (mud & water)
- Terrestrial hibernators usually find sites below frost line
- Snakes ball up in communal dens; this does not keep them warm, but may reduce water loss
- Many herps rest on bottom of water body, not in mud, increasing cutaneous respiration
- In mud, must switch to anaerobic respiration; have high lactic acid tolerance
- Common to find turtles swimming under ice
- Freezing is not lethal to herps.
- False – it is, they can withstand brief periods of supercooling
- How do ice crystals physically damage cells and tissues (when the animal freezes)?
- Intracellularly - dehydrates cells, raising osmolality
- Extracellularly - blocks O2 and nutrient flow
- What happens when freeze tolerant herps are frozen?
- Heart stops, metabolism stops, no brain activity detected for up to 2 weeks in frozen wood frogs…
- Vital functions return within 1-2 hours of thawing!
- What is cryoprotectant?
- Antifreeze inside cells = cryoprotectant (glycerol and/or glucose)
- What happens to extracellular body water when herps are frozen?
- Extracellular body water becomes ice (this can be up to 40-60% of total water in body!)
- What is estivation?
- Seasonal torpor summer torpor
- Less severe depression of core temperature and metabolic rate
- Generally in response to drought or extreme heat
- (dehydration would occur quickly)
- What animals estivate?
- Amphibians in desert face long periods of low humidity and no rain
- Lungfish in S. America & Africa also estivate
- Some desert rodents estivate
- (e.g. cactus mouse, mohave ground squirrel)
- What is a benefit or torpor?
- balance the energy budget in extreme environmental conditions
- What are costs of torpor?
- animal is helpless, little or no growth, reduced reproductive period
- True / False Torpor is a last resource when animals cannot deal with environment in a better way (such as insulation, or migration).
- True