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完全和部分低温状态下的王企鹅体表复温。

Body surface rewarming in fully and partially hypothermic king penguins.

机构信息

Département Ecologie, Université de Strasbourg, CNRS, Physiologie et Ethologie, IPHC UMR 7178, 67000, Strasbourg, France.

School of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Biological Sciences, University of Leeds, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK.

出版信息

J Comp Physiol B. 2020 Sep;190(5):597-609. doi: 10.1007/s00360-020-01294-1. Epub 2020 Jul 12.

Abstract

Penguins face a major thermal transition when returning to land in a hypothermic state after a foraging trip. Uninsulated appendages (flippers and feet) could provide flexible heat exchange during subsequent rewarming. Here, we tested the hypothesis that peripheral vasodilation could be delayed during this recovery stage. To this end, we designed an experiment to examine patterns of surface rewarming in fully hypothermic (the cloaca and peripheral regions (here; flippers, feet and the breast) < 37 °C) and partially hypothermic (cloaca at normothermia ≥ 37 °C, but periphery at hypothermia) king penguins (Aptenodytes patagonicus) when they rewarmed in the laboratory. Both groups rewarmed during the 21 min observation period, but the temperature changes were larger in fully than in partially hypothermic birds. Moreover, we observed a 5 min delay of peripheral temperature in fully compared to partially hypothermic birds, suggesting that this process was impacted by low internal temperature. To investigate whether our laboratory data were applicable to field conditions, we also recorded surface temperatures of free-ranging penguins after they came ashore to the colony. Initial surface temperatures were lower in these birds compared to in those that rewarmed in the laboratory, and changed less over a comparable period of time on land. This could be explained both by environmental conditions and possible handling-induced thermogenesis in the laboratory. Nevertheless, this study demonstrated that appendage vasodilation is flexibly used during rewarming and that recovery may be influenced by both internal temperature and environmental conditions when penguins transition from sea to land.

摘要

企鹅在觅食后回到陆地时会处于低温状态,它们面临着重大的热传递转变。未隔热的附肢(鳍状肢和脚)可以在随后的复温过程中提供灵活的热交换。在这里,我们测试了这样一个假设,即在恢复阶段,外周血管扩张可能会延迟。为此,我们设计了一个实验来检查完全低温(泄殖腔和外周区域(这里;鳍状肢、脚和胸部)<37°C)和部分低温(泄殖腔正常体温≥37°C,但外周温度低温)的帝企鹅(Aptenodytes patagonicus)在实验室中复温时表面复温的模式。两组都在 21 分钟的观察期内复温,但完全低温组的温度变化大于部分低温组。此外,我们观察到完全低温组与部分低温组相比,外周温度有 5 分钟的延迟,这表明这一过程受到内部低温的影响。为了研究我们的实验室数据是否适用于野外条件,我们还记录了自由放养的企鹅上岸到栖息地后的表面温度。与在实验室中复温的企鹅相比,这些鸟类的初始表面温度较低,在陆地上相同的时间段内变化较小。这既可以用环境条件来解释,也可以用实验室中可能因处理而引起的产热来解释。然而,这项研究表明,在复温过程中,附肢血管扩张是灵活的,当企鹅从海洋过渡到陆地时,恢复可能受到内部温度和环境条件的影响。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/d08a/7441059/0007076149da/360_2020_1294_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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