Department of Biology and Centre for Forest Inter-disciplinary Research, University of Winnipeg, 515 Portage Avenue, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada R3B2E9.
Integr Comp Biol. 2017 Dec 1;57(6):1214-1224. doi: 10.1093/icb/icx087.
Seasonality of temperature and food availability can lead to trade-offs between the benefits of immediate reproduction and costs associated with mortality risk from starvation, inclement weather, or predation. Hibernating mammals exhibit an enormous seasonal shift in physiology and behavior and provide a useful system to examine the effect of this trade-off on key events in the annual cycle. Most of what we understand about the ecological energetics and phenology of hibernation comes from studies of rodent hibernators such as ground squirrels, chipmunks, and dormice. Temperate-zone, insectivorous bats, however, provide another useful model system to examine trade-offs influencing seasonal change within individuals. Here, I review recent studies from my laboratory on little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus) from central Canada to understand the interplay between capacity for energy storage, energy expenditure during hibernation, and the timing of key events in the annual cycle of hibernating mammals. These studies have relied on measurements of body condition to assess energetic status, biologging of skin temperature using temperature telemetry, and use of passive transponders (i.e., PIT tags) to quantify emergence timing. In general, these studies suggest that, in part due to constraints associated with flight, bats exhibit unique, or at least unusual, adaptations for extreme energy savings during winter. The results also support the optimization hypothesis that current energetic status and future energy requirements influence energy expenditure during hibernation and the timing of emergence from hibernation in spring. Taken together, this work provides insight into the influence of reproductive timing and energy availability on hibernation behavior and physiology. It also has implications for understanding responses of bat populations to anthropogenic impacts like climate change and white-nose syndrome.
温度和食物可获得性的季节性变化可能导致即时繁殖的好处与因饥饿、恶劣天气或捕食而导致的死亡风险相关的成本之间产生权衡。冬眠哺乳动物在生理和行为上表现出巨大的季节性转变,为研究这种权衡对年度周期中关键事件的影响提供了一个有用的系统。我们对冬眠的生态能量学和物候学的大部分了解都来自对冬眠啮齿动物(如地松鼠、花栗鼠和睡鼠)的研究。然而,温带、食虫蝙蝠为我们提供了另一个有用的模型系统,以研究影响个体季节性变化的权衡。在这里,我回顾了我在加拿大中部的小褐蝙蝠(Myotis lucifugus)实验室的最新研究,以了解能量储存能力、冬眠期间能量消耗以及冬眠哺乳动物年度周期中关键事件的时间安排之间的相互作用。这些研究依赖于身体状况测量来评估能量状态,使用温度遥测技术对皮肤温度进行生物标记,并使用被动转发器(即 PIT 标签)来量化出现时间。总的来说,这些研究表明,部分由于与飞行相关的限制,蝙蝠在冬季表现出独特的,或者至少是不寻常的,适应极端节能的能力。研究结果还支持优化假说,即当前的能量状态和未来的能量需求会影响冬眠期间的能量消耗以及春季从冬眠中苏醒的时间。综上所述,这项工作深入了解了繁殖时间和能量可用性对冬眠行为和生理学的影响。它也对理解蝙蝠种群对气候变化和白鼻综合征等人为影响的反应具有重要意义。