Abstract
We determined the effect of food availability (presence/absence) and ambient temperature (25/10°C) on daily energy expenditure and the use of activity and torpor in summer-acclimated captiveGraphiurus murinus. Daily energy expenditure declined logarithmically with duration of food deprivation at a mean rate of 11 and 31% per day at 25 and 10°C, respectively. The incidence of torpor in the presence of food at 25°C was low (one in seven individuals) and increased on a single day's exposure to 10°C and with duration of food deprivation. Use of torpor was highest during the day, varied between individuals, and torpor bouts of greater than 24h duration were not noted. With food deprivation, individuals at 25°C initially responded by reducing activity but remained euthermic while the same individuals at 10°C responded by increasing their use of torpor during the light period; this difference in response probably reflects a difference in the relative energetic benefits of torpor at different temperatures.
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Abbreviations
- BM :
-
body mass
- DEE :
-
daily energy expenditure
- RQ :
-
respiratory quotient
- SMR :
-
standard metabolic rate
- T a :
-
ambient temperature
- T b :
-
rectal temperature
- VO2:
-
oxygen consumption
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Communicated by I.D. Hume
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Webb, P.I., Skinner, J.D. Summer torpor in African woodland dormiceGraphiurus murinus (Myoxidae: Graphiurinae). J Comp Physiol B 166, 325–330 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02439919
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02439919