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Metabolic rate in common shrews is unaffected by temperature, leading to lower energetic costs through seasonal size reduction

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2020

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Published

Zusammenfassung

Small endothermic mammals have high metabolisms, particularly at cold temperatures. In light of this, some species have evolved a seemingly illogical strategy: they reduce the size of the brain and several organs to become even smaller in winter. To test how this morphological strategy affects energy consumption across seasonally shifting ambient temperatures, we measured oxygen consumption and behaviour in the three seasonal phenotypes of the common shrew (Sorex araneus), which differ in size by about 20%. Body mass was the main driver of oxygen consumption, not the reduction of metabolically expensive brain mass. Against our expectations, we found no change in relative oxygen consumption with low ambient temperature. Thus, smaller body size in winter resulted in significant absolute energy savings. This could only partly be explained by a change in activity budgets. Our findings highlight that these shrews manage to avoid one of the most fundamental and intuitive rules of ecology allowing them to subsist with lower resource availability and successfully survive the harsh conditions of winter.

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Fachgebiet (DDC)
570 Biowissenschaften, Biologie

Schlagwörter

Sorex araneus, Dehnel's Phenomenon, wintering adaptation, Oxygen consumption

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Metabolic rate in common shrews is unaffected by temperature, leading to lower energetic costs through seasonal size reduction
(2020) Schaeffer, Paul J.; O'Mara, M. Teague; Breiholz, Japhet; Keicher, Lara; Lazaro, Javier; Muturi, Marion; Dechmann, Dina K. N.
Erschienen in: Royal Society open science. Royal Society of London. 2020, 7(4), 191989. eISSN 2054-5703. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1098/rsos.191989
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ISO 690SCHAEFFER, Paul, M. Teague O'MARA, Japhet BREIHOLZ, Lara KEICHER, Javier LAZARO, Marion MUTURI, Dina K. N. DECHMANN, 2020. Metabolic rate in common shrews is unaffected by temperature, leading to lower energetic costs through seasonal size reduction
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