体型大小影响条纹仓鼠应对极冷或极热温度的能力。

IF 2.9 2区 生物学 Q2 BIOLOGY
Journal of thermal biology Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-11-29 DOI:10.1016/j.jtherbio.2024.104008
Chenxiao Hu, Ruihan Zhang, Wenting Zhang, Yuxin Zheng, Jing Cao, Zhijun Zhao
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引用次数: 0

摘要

生物体的体型大小是影响其生活史几乎所有方面的一个关键特征。尽管越来越多的证据证明了伯格曼定律,但对于动物在极端寒冷或炎热环境下的身体大小和最大体温调节能力之间的联系,人们知之甚少。研究了小体鼠和大体鼠的静息代谢率(RMR)、非寒战产热(NST)和热中性区(TNZ)的上、下临界温度等热特性。我们还研究了在极冷(-15°C)或高温(38°C)下的最大温度调节能力,无论温度暴露如何,不同大小的仓鼠都具有相似的RMR和NST。大仓鼠的体重比小仓鼠多29.9%。大仓鼠表现出较宽的TNZ,较低的低临界温度,并在17小时热暴露结束时表现出相当大的高热。相比之下,相对于大仓鼠,小仓鼠在17小时的低温暴露后表现出体温过低。冷暴露后大仓鼠的基础热导率比小仓鼠低17.2%,最大热导率比小仓鼠低14.9%,热暴露后大仓鼠的热导率比小仓鼠低22.6%。表明产热应激和氧化应激的一些分子标记在大仓鼠和小仓鼠之间没有显著差异。这些发现表明,体型较大的个体在应对极端寒冷时的体温调节能力更强,而在应对极端炎热时的能力则较弱。相比之下,较小的个体表现出相反的趋势。身体的大小可能决定体温调节能力,以应对极端的寒冷和炎热,在这种情况下,身体的散热可能比产热更重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Body size influences the capacity to cope with extreme cold or hot temperatures in the striped hamster.

Body size of organisms is a key trait influencing nearly all aspects of their life history. Despite growing evidence of Bergmann's rule, there is considerably less known about the links between body size and the maximum capacity to thermoregulate of an animal in response to extreme cold or hot environment. Thermal characteristics such as resting metabolic rate (RMR) and non-shivering thermogenesis (NST), and the upper- and lower-critical temperatures of the thermal neutral zone (TNZ) were investigated in small and large body sized striped hamsters (Cricetulus barabensis). The maximum capacity to thermoregulate in response to extreme cold (-15 °C) or hot temperature (38 °C) was also examined, where both, different sized hamsters had similar RMR and NST regardless of temperature exposure. The large hamsters had 29.9% more body mass compared to small hamsters. The large hamsters showed a wider TNZ, with lower, lower-critical temperature, and showed considerable hyperthermia at the end of a 17-h hot exposure. In contrast, the small hamsters showed hypothermia following a 17-h cold exposure relative to large hamsters. In addition, the large hamsters showed 17.2% lower basal thermal conductance, and 14.9% lower maximum thermal conductance than the small hamsters after cold exposure, and 22.6% lower thermal conductance following heat exposure. Several molecular markers indicative of thermogenesis and oxidative stress did not differ significantly between the large and small hamsters. These findings suggest that individuals with larger body sizes have greater capacity to thermoregulate to cope with extreme cold, and a reduced capacity in response to extreme hot. In contrast, smaller individuals demonstrated the opposite trend. Body size may decide the capacity to thermoregulate to cope with extreme cold and heat, within which body heat dissipation is likely more important than heat production.

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来源期刊
Journal of thermal biology
Journal of thermal biology 生物-动物学
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
7.40%
发文量
196
审稿时长
14.5 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Thermal Biology publishes articles that advance our knowledge on the ways and mechanisms through which temperature affects man and animals. This includes studies of their responses to these effects and on the ecological consequences. Directly relevant to this theme are: • The mechanisms of thermal limitation, heat and cold injury, and the resistance of organisms to extremes of temperature • The mechanisms involved in acclimation, acclimatization and evolutionary adaptation to temperature • Mechanisms underlying the patterns of hibernation, torpor, dormancy, aestivation and diapause • Effects of temperature on reproduction and development, growth, ageing and life-span • Studies on modelling heat transfer between organisms and their environment • The contributions of temperature to effects of climate change on animal species and man • Studies of conservation biology and physiology related to temperature • Behavioural and physiological regulation of body temperature including its pathophysiology and fever • Medical applications of hypo- and hyperthermia Article types: • Original articles • Review articles
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