Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia, Branišovská 1760, 370 05, České Budějovice, Czech Republic.
Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia, Branišovská 1760, 370 05, České Budějovice, Czech Republic.
J Therm Biol. 2023 Jul;115:103618. doi: 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2023.103618. Epub 2023 Jun 28.
Several hundred mammalian species thrive in complex burrow systems, which protect them from climatic extremes and predation. At the same time, it is also a stressful environment due to low food supply, high humidity, and, in some cases, a hypoxic and hypercapnic atmosphere. To face such conditions, subterranean rodents have convergently evolved low basal metabolic rate, high minimal thermal conductance and low body temperature. Although these parameters have been intensively studied in the last decades, such information is far from being well-known in one of the most studied groups of subterranean rodents, the blind mole rats of the genus Nannospalax. The lack of information is particularly noticeable for parameters such as the upper critical temperature and the width of the thermoneutral zone. In our study, we analysed the energetics of the Upper Galilee Mountain blind mole rat Nannospalax galili and found its basal metabolic rate of 0.84 ± 0.10 mL O×g × h, thermoneutral zone between 28 and 35 °C, mean T within the zone of 36.3 ± 0.6 °C, and minimal thermal conductance equal to 0.082 mL O×g × h × C. Nannospalax galili is a truly homeothermic rodent well adapted to face lower ambient temperatures, because its T was stable down to the lowest temperature measured (10 °C). At the same time, a relatively high basal metabolic rate and relatively low minimal thermal conductance for a subterranean rodent of such body mass, and the difficulty of surviving ambient temperatures slightly above upper critical temperature, indicates problems with sufficient heat dissipation at higher temperatures. This can easily lead to overheating, that is relevant mainly during the hot-dry season. These findings suggest that N. galili can be threatened by ongoing global climate change.
数百种哺乳动物在复杂的洞穴系统中繁衍生息,这些洞穴系统使它们免受极端气候和捕食的影响。同时,由于食物供应不足、湿度高,在某些情况下还存在缺氧和高碳酸血症,洞穴环境也是一个充满压力的环境。为了适应这些条件,地下啮齿动物演化出了低基础代谢率、高最小热导和低体温。尽管这些参数在过去几十年中得到了深入研究,但在地下啮齿动物中研究最为深入的一类,即盲鼹鼠属的盲鼹鼠中,这些信息远未广为人知。特别是在上临界温度和等热区宽度等参数方面,信息的缺乏尤为明显。在我们的研究中,我们分析了加利利山盲鼹鼠(Nannospalax galili)的能量学,发现其基础代谢率为 0.84±0.10mL O×g×h,等热区在 28 到 35°C 之间,区内平均温度为 36.3±0.6°C,最小热导等于 0.082mL O×g×h×C。加利利山盲鼹鼠是一种真正的恒温啮齿动物,能够很好地适应较低的环境温度,因为它的体温在测量到的最低温度(10°C)下保持稳定。同时,对于如此体型的地下啮齿动物来说,其基础代谢率相对较高,最小热导相对较低,以及在稍高于上临界温度的环境温度下难以生存,这表明在较高温度下存在散热不足的问题。这很容易导致过热,主要与炎热干燥的季节有关。这些发现表明,N. galili 可能受到正在发生的全球气候变化的威胁。