Fuller Andrea, Hetem Robyn S, Maloney Shane K, Mitchell Duncan
Brain Function Research Group, School of Physiology, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa; and.
Physiology (Bethesda). 2014 May;29(3):159-67. doi: 10.1152/physiol.00049.2013.
Although laboratory studies of large mammals have revealed valuable information on thermoregulation, such studies cannot predict accurately how animals respond in their natural habitats. Through insights obtained on thermoregulatory behavior, body temperature variability, and selective brain cooling in free-living mammals, we show here how we can better understand the physiological capacity of large mammals to cope with hotter and drier arid-zone habitats likely with climate change.
尽管对大型哺乳动物的实验室研究揭示了有关体温调节的宝贵信息,但此类研究无法准确预测动物在其自然栖息地中的反应。通过对自由生活的哺乳动物的体温调节行为、体温变异性和选择性脑冷却的深入了解,我们在此展示了如何能更好地理解大型哺乳动物应对可能因气候变化而变得更炎热、更干燥的干旱地区栖息地的生理能力。