The missing cost of ecological sleep loss.

John A Lesku, Niels C Rattenborg
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Sleep serves many important functions. And yet, emerging studies over the last decade indicate that some species routinely sleep little, or can temporarily restrict their sleep to low levels, seemingly without cost. Taken together, these systems challenge the prevalent view of sleep as an essential state on which waking performance depends. Here, we review diverse case-studies, including elephant matriarchs, post-partum cetaceans, seawater sleeping fur seals, soaring seabirds, birds breeding in the high Arctic, captive cavefish, and sexually aroused fruit flies. We evaluate the likelihood of mechanisms that might allow more sleep than is presently appreciated. But even then, it appears these species are indeed performing well on little sleep. The costs, if any, remain unclear. Either these species have evolved a (yet undescribed) ability to supplant sleep needs, or they endure a (yet undescribed) cost. In both cases, there is urgent need for the study of non-traditional species so we can fully appreciate the extent, causes, and consequences of ecological sleep loss.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

生态睡眠损失的缺失成本。
睡眠具有许多重要功能。然而,过去十年中新出现的研究表明,一些物种通常睡眠不足,或者可以暂时将睡眠限制在较低水平,似乎没有成本。总之,这些系统挑战了普遍认为睡眠是清醒表现所依赖的基本状态的观点。在这里,我们回顾了各种案例研究,包括大象母系、产后鲸目动物、睡在海水中的毛皮海豹、翱翔的海鸟、在北极高地繁殖的鸟类、圈养的洞穴鱼和性唤起的果蝇。我们评估了可能允许比目前所了解的更多睡眠的机制的可能性。但即便如此,这些物种似乎确实在睡眠不足的情况下表现良好。成本(如果有的话)仍不清楚。要么这些物种进化出了(但未描述)取代睡眠需求的能力,要么它们承受着(但未说明)成本。在这两种情况下,都迫切需要对非传统物种进行研究,以便我们能够充分了解生态睡眠损失的程度、原因和后果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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