School of Agriculture, Biomedicine and Environment, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia.
Department of Neurology, Center for Experimental Neurology, Bern University Hospital (Inselspital), Bern, Switzerland; Ohio Sleep Medicine Institute, Dublin, OH, USA.
Curr Biol. 2022 Jun 20;32(12):R656-R661. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.04.004.
Energy derived from food is a precious resource to animals. Those finite calories are often well-earned through exhaustive foraging effort, which can dominate waking hours, to support physiological processes (e.g. body maintenance and growth) and ecological necessities (e.g. predator avoidance and courting) that are pertinent to the production of progeny. So, it is unsurprising to find that animals have evolved strategies to guard against the gratuitous waste of hard-won caloric energy. Yet, it remains surprising to find such diversity, and elegant creativity, in those solutions. Brief examples of energy-saving innovation could include the very shape of animals and how they move, from streamlined swimming sharks to skyward-soaring seabirds; or the evolutionary appearance of various states of dormancy, such as endothermic animals sacrificing high body temperature through modest (torpor) or severe (hibernation) curtailments to metabolic heat production. Another reversibly dormant state with energetic benefits is sleep.
动物从食物中获取的能量是一种宝贵的资源。这些有限的卡路里通常是通过艰苦的觅食努力获得的,这种努力可以占据动物清醒时间的大部分,以支持与繁殖后代相关的生理过程(如身体维持和生长)和生态需求(如避免捕食者和求偶)。因此,动物进化出了策略来防止来之不易的卡路里能量被浪费也就不足为奇了。然而,这些解决方案中的多样性和巧妙的创造力仍然令人惊讶。节能创新的简短示例可能包括动物的形状及其运动方式,从流线型游泳的鲨鱼到翱翔天空的海鸟;或者各种休眠状态的进化出现,例如通过适度(昏睡)或严重(冬眠)减少代谢产热来牺牲体温的恒温动物。另一种具有能量效益的可逆休眠状态是睡眠。