Ignat'ev D A, Sukhova G S, Sukhov V P
Zh Evol Biokhim Fiziol. 1991 Mar-Apr;27(2):206-10.
In experiments on active ground squirrels, it has been shown that the effect of intraperitoneal injection of serotonin on the heart rate depends on the dose and the environmental temperature. At relatively low doses and high environmental temperature, serotonin increases the heart rate and body temperature; on the contrary, with the increase in the dosage and the decrease in the environmental temperature the heart rate and body temperature of animals decrease. It is suggested that this relationship serves as one of the factors which enhance the transition of animals from one level of activity to another during the beginning and the end of hibernation.