Lecture 17 Flashcards
What are the differences between hibernation and torpor?
. The duration
. The groups that undertake them
. The size of the animals that undertake them
How does duration differ between hibernation and torpor?
. Torpor is usually a physiological state that is utilised daily or over a few days
. Whereas hibernation takes place over weeks, maybe months
What groups undertake torpor? What is the issue with one of these groups?
The groups that undertake torpor include birds, mammals and maybe reptiles but if difficult because their metabolic rate is linked to that of the environment so if the environment temp changes then so does the metabolic rate.
So it is only really the birds and the mammals that undergo a regulated drop in body temp that is torpor
What animals does hibernation occur in?
Only really in mammals but one species of bird, the poorwill
What is the only species of bird that hibernates?
The poorwill
What sized animals are torpor and hibernation undertaken by?
. Torpor is usually undertaken by small animals
Why is torpor usually undertaken by small animals?
It is related to the duration of the state. So if you are changing your body temp daily then there are limits of how big you can be for those changes to take place.
Large animals change their body temp much slower than small animals do so it is not really a strategy that large animals can use
What are the largest animals that can undertake torpor? What is the median?
About 9 kilos is the largest.
The median is about 19g
Why type of animals is hibernation generally taken by and why?
Hibernation is generally taken by slightly bigger animals because to be able to withstand long periods of low metabolic rates and you need the stores and you have to be a certain size to be able to put on sufficient stores to be able to last you over the period of time and the smaller you are the less you are able to put on relative to your body size
What is the median mass of mammals that hibernate?
It is about 85g (so about 4 times that of the torpid animals)
Give the levels of hypometabolism in order
- Regional hypothermia (cooling of parts of the body without altering Tb)
- Regulated central hypothermia (e.g. nocturnal torpor)
- Partial hibernation (lacking either sustained consciously with incomplete metabolic depression)
- True hibernation
What is regional hypothermia?
Is what we see in us where certain parts of the body are cooler than the body core e.g. the skin and fingers
Give an example regulated central hypothermia
Nocturnal torpor
What is partial hibernation?
Where there is incomplete metabolic depression but there is sustained consciousness
What are the three definitive and coordinated physiological changes that true hibernators undergo?
. Thermal dormancy
. Behavioural suppression
. Metabolic inhibition
What is thermal dormancy? (Is one of the 3 definitive and coordinated physiological changes true hibernators undergo)
The ability of an animal to operate its biological functions at very low core body temperatures. (The animals essentially stop thermoregulating entirely and any functions that are undertaken by the animals have to be undertaken at those low temperatures)
What is behavioural suppression (one of the three definitive and coordinated physiological changes that true hibernators undergo)?
The cessation of activity of many muscles (they are unresponsive), which depends upon the ability of the brain to override sensory inputs and endogenous rhythms such as breathing
What is metabolic inhibition (one of the three definitive and coordinated physiological changes that true hibernators undergo)?
The ability of an animal to undergo episodic bradymetabolic changes (those vet low levels of metabolism): that is through the depression of energy related and metabolic reactions
What are the three most important environmental stimuli imitating hibernation?
. Food supply- dwindling food supply is the reason for going into that hibernating state
. Daylength- changes in daylength because that food supply of plants and other animals is linked to it
. Ta- the ambient temp changes, most of the animals we are talking about live in temperate areas and so what we are talking about is a reduction in food supply, daylength and ambient temperature
For any reptile or amphibian what is it’s body temperature predominantly linked to?
Linked to that of the environment
How can reptiles and amphibians control their body temperature (so some extent)?
Through behavioural and physiological means (but ultimately they are linked to the external temperature)
What happens to reptiles and amphibians when the temperature drops?
Their metabolic rate also drops
How do most reptiles and amphibians spend winter?
In a torpid state (due to a reduction in temperature)
Some do some species of tortoise and snakes spend their winter?
There is some evidence that some species hibernate