The relative roles of the parasol-like tail and burrow shuttling in thermoregulation of free-ranging Cape ground squirrels,Xerus inauris |
| |
Authors: | Linda G. Fick Tomasz A. Kucio Andrea Fuller André Matthee Duncan Mitchell |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Brain Function Research Group, School of Physiology, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa;2. National Zoological Gardens Game Breeding Centre, PO Box 716, Lichtenburg 2740, South Africa |
| |
Abstract: | As small arid-zone mammals, Cape ground squirrels (Xerus inauris) are unusual in being diurnally active. It is postulated that they remain active during the day by using their parasol-like tails to shade their bodies whilst foraging. However, no studies have continuously measured body temperature to determine the effect of using the tail as a parasol, relative to other thermoregulatory behaviours, such as burrow retreat. We caught four free-ranging Cape ground squirrels (673 ± 36 g) and surgically implanted miniature temperature-sensitive data loggers into their abdomens, to record body temperature every 5 min to an accuracy of 0.04 °C, before they were released back into their home range and observed for two weeks. Mean daily peak black globe temperature was 41 °C, and daily peak body temperature reached 40 °C. Ground squirrels raised their tails significantly more often at globe temperatures above 30 °C, but raising the tail did not decrease body temperature, nor prevent body temperature rising. Ground squirrels retreated to burrows, at 18 °C, significantly more often at high body temperatures and body temperature dropped 1–2 °C before re-emergence. We believe that the tail was raised to provide thermal comfort during high solar radiation exposure, and that burrow retreat was employed to dissipate a heat load and remain active diurnally. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|