Adaptive physiological variation in nonshivering thermogenesis and its significance in speciation |
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Authors: | A Haim G Heth Z Avnon E Nevo |
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Institution: | (1) School of Education of the Kibbutz Movement Oranim, University of Haifa, P.O., 36910 Kiryat Tivon, Israel;(2) Present address: Institute of Evolution, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel |
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Abstract: | Summary Nonshivering thermogenesis (NST) magnitude was studied in the four chromosomal species of subterranean mole rats of theSpalax ehrenbergi superspecies in Israel. The four species show a distribution pattern which correlates with increasing aridity. The 2n=52 species inhabits the cold and humid regions, 2n=54 cold and dry, 2n-58 warm and humid, and 2n=60 the more arid regions in which temperatures fluctuate daily and annually. NST was measured as the ratio between maximal oxygen
due to noradrenaline injection and minimal
measured in anaesthetized animals.The chromosomal species 2n=60 from semiarid and arid habitats has the highest NST value. This fact emerges from the low Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) of this species relative to all the other three species. A linear correlation was found between NST magnitude and the average daily range of temperature during June and September.We conclude that speciation of theS. ehrenbergi complex in Israel has thermoregulatory correlates such as heat production by NST, among others. The level of NST appears to be an adaptive physiological characteristic in the ecological speciation of subterranean mole rats. |
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