Lecture 13- Animal adaptations to extreme environments: Alpine Zones Flashcards
What is the torpor in mammals like?
• MR at 1/20 - 1/100 normal, thus saves energy • exit torpor by turning MR up, body temperature follows, the signals are not understood, the ones triggering the MR up • can be short-term or long-term depending on food availability -some animals can drop down to 5 degrees
What is torpor like in small marsupials?
-measure by oxygen consumption, if it drops then the metabollic rate drops -
often do test drops
- this one is nocturnal and goes into torpor during the day
- must be in a safe place when in torpor
What is hibernation?
-similar to torpor -Seasonally-induced deep torpor, longer bouts -Only two Australian mammals: - 1.Mountain pygmy-possum - 2. Echidna -Fatten-up prior to winter, really important, must have minimum amount of energy left to leave hibernation so if too low on energy will not go into torpor -Hibernaculum (safe place) -Test drops in body temp -Periodic arousal= about getting rid off waste products
What is a hibernaculum?
-safe place to be during hibernation
How do ectotherms fare in the alpine zone?
• Lower energy requirements – useful in an energy poor environment which is an advantage • However Tb declines with environmental temperatures, thus can’t maintain activity • Straetgies to avoid freezing?? - dormant life stage - seek refuge (like under the snow) - migrate -so have a combination of strategies to avoid freezing
What are the invertebrate adaptations to temperature fluctuations?
• Small size (hypolithy - occupy sheltered micro- climates e.g. under rocks) • Stenothermy (physiology geared to operate at low temps thus sensitive to heat) • Reduced wings (flying difficult in high winds)
How does the Tasmanian scorpionfly deal with low biological productivity in the alpine zone?
Tasmanian scorpionfly (Apteropanorpa tasmanica) In spring and summer, gather around edges of snow drifts and feed on detritus as it is released during snow melt (this is blown up from sub-alpine areas)
What is the behavioural thermoregulation in invertebrates?
-Chameleon grasshopper (Kosciuscola tristis) is a good example -Remain active all day (can cope with temperature extremes) -Movement in & out of sun -Thermal melanism: - in cold conditions (higher altitude) darker/black, thus absorb heat - in warmer conditions (lower altitude) – paler blue or green i.e. ectotherms, but use behaviour & melanism to raise body temp via sun
How do the grasshoppers change colour?
-in temperatures above 25 degrees they become paler -pigment granules migrate in and out of the epidermal layer depending on the temperature
How do frogs do in alpine zone?
-Frogs are also in the alpine zone!! eg: Corroboree frog= don’t jump, Baw Baw frog • Over-winter in alpine areas (low mobility) • Become totally inactive during cold temperature, must be in safe habitat • Must find microhabitats that don’t freeze -must have running water somewhere
What are the characteristics of Coroboree frogs?
• Occur mainly over 1800m elevation • Males dig burrow in sphagnum moss bogs & call • Females lay in this nest • Eggs hatch, but development is delayed until winter, then slow. When burrows fill with water in spring they mature -female frogs don’t sing, at all ever
Where do the Corroboree frogs occur?
- limited and fragmented areas
- also because sphagnum moss is highly impacted by fire
- very rare and declining already
What are breeding patterns like in alpine zone animals?
•Short period of warmer weather, thus short growing season & short breeding season, but very predictable (unlike in arid zone) typically growing season is short and must get ready for the cold, very tightly synchronised breeding pattern •Some species exhibit dormancy at other times of year (i.e. non breeding season) •Invertebrates: speed of development often not as crucial as in arid areas. Life-cycle usually completed in a season. •Larger animals, e.g. Mountain pygmy-possum - synchronised breeding season, fast growth etc. -invertebrates usually breed much faster than vertebrates
What is the breeding pattern of the mountain pygmy possum?
-highly seasonal - Entirely limited to alpine regions, - Thought extinct until 1966, endangered - 30 to 80g & lives 5 – 12 (?) years - Habitat: boulder fields and rock screes, live under them and move under snow in winter - Hibernates up to 7 months/yr, they fatten up a lot before hibernation - Diet: arthropods, fruit, seeds & caches food - Mating occurs when snow melts and Bogong moths arrive (store body fat) - “Tunnel of love” - sexes occupy different habitats -females only live upslope and males only live downslope, so they engineered the tunnel of love so could -ski runs are an issue as they tamped down the snow and the animals cannot move underneath
What is the breeding pattern of the Bogong moth?
-Small grey-brown moth (wingspan approx 4cm), alpine seasonal migrant
- Larvae winter in pastures in Sth QLD, NSW & SE Vic, but food plants dry over summer
- Intolerant of summer heat
- Adults migrate to alpine areas, shelter in caves & crevices >1500m during spring/summer up to 17 000 individuals/m2
- Aestivate when in alpine zone
- survive on fat stores
- very successful and in vast numbers in Australia -very good source of food as are very fatty