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Metabolism and thermoregulation in the springhare (<Emphasis Type="Italic">Pedetes capensis</Emphasis>)
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">D?M?PeinkeEmail author  C?R?Brown
Institution:Gauteng Department of Agriculture, Conservation, Environment and Land Affairs, PO Box 8769, Johannesburg 2000, South Africa. DeanP@gpg.gov.za
Abstract:Springhares are large, nocturnally active, diurnally fossorial rodents that typically inhabit arid and semi-arid areas. This lifestyle means that they need to balance excessive heat loss when foraging at night against insufficient heat loss in a potentially warm, humid burrow and both of these against the need to minimize water turnover and energy requirements. In this study we investigated metabolism and thermoregulation in these animals. Basal metabolic rate averaged 8.62+/-1.37 J g(-1) h(-1) and minimum thermal conductance 0.386+/-0.062 J g(-1) h(-1) degrees C(-1). These were higher and lower than expected, respectively. This, along with a relatively low, lower critical temperature and broad thermal neutral zone indicate that springhares are physiologically well suited to the low night-time temperatures, which they typically encounter. Body temperatures were quite labile but springhares became hyperthermic at temperatures above 30 degrees C suggesting that they are poor thermoregulators at high temperatures. This is attributed to their seldom, if ever, encountering temperatures in this range. Insufficient heat loss under normal resting conditions does not appear to be a problem, as springhares inhabit deep burrows in which the temperature never exceeds the upper critical temperature. Excess heat generated during vigorous underground exercise is presumably stored and dissipated to the cool night air or the cooler soil when subsequently resting. Water turnover and energy expenditure are presumably adequately addressed by other physiological and behavioural characteristics.
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