School of Biological Sciences, Queen's University Belfast, 19 Chlorine Gardens, Belfast BT9 5DL, UK.
Department of Game Management and Wildlife Biology, Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences, Kamýcká 129, Prague 6-Suchdol 165 00, Czech Republic.
Proc Biol Sci. 2024 May;291(2023):20232115. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2023.2115. Epub 2024 May 29.
Sleep serves vital physiological functions, yet how sleep in wild animals is influenced by environmental conditions is poorly understood. Here we use high-resolution biologgers to investigate sleep in wild animals over ecologically relevant time scales and quantify variability between individuals under changing conditions. We developed a robust classification for accelerometer data and measured multiple dimensions of sleep in the wild boar () over an annual cycle. In support of the hypothesis that environmental conditions determine thermoregulatory challenges, which regulate sleep, we show that sleep quantity, efficiency and quality are reduced on warmer days, sleep is less fragmented in longer and more humid days, while greater snow cover and rainfall promote sleep quality. Importantly, this longest and most detailed analysis of sleep in wild animals to date reveals large inter- and intra-individual variation. Specifically, short-sleepers sleep up to 46% less than long-sleepers but do not compensate for their short sleep through greater plasticity or quality, suggesting they may pay higher costs of sleep deprivation. Given the major role of sleep in health, our results suggest that global warming and the associated increase in extreme climatic events are likely to negatively impact sleep, and consequently health, in wildlife, particularly in nocturnal animals.
睡眠对生理功能至关重要,但野生动物的睡眠如何受到环境条件的影响还知之甚少。在这里,我们使用高分辨率生物记录器在生态相关的时间尺度上研究野生动物的睡眠,并在不断变化的条件下量化个体之间的可变性。我们为加速度计数据开发了一种稳健的分类,并在野猪中测量了一年周期内的多个睡眠维度。为了支持环境条件决定调节睡眠的热调节挑战的假设,我们表明,在温暖的日子里,睡眠量、效率和质量会降低,在更长、更潮湿的日子里,睡眠碎片化程度会降低,而更多的积雪和降雨会促进睡眠质量。重要的是,这是迄今为止对野生动物睡眠进行的最长、最详细的分析,揭示了个体间和个体内的巨大差异。具体来说,短睡眠者的睡眠时间比长睡眠者少 46%,但不会通过更大的灵活性或更高的质量来弥补睡眠不足,这表明它们可能会付出更高的睡眠剥夺代价。鉴于睡眠在健康中的重要作用,我们的研究结果表明,全球变暖以及与之相关的极端气候事件的增加,可能会对野生动物的睡眠,特别是夜间活动的动物的睡眠和健康产生负面影响。