Hot bats go cold: Heterothermy in neotropical bats

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Hot bats go cold: Heterothermy in neotropical bats
Abstract
Torpor is common in bats, but has historically been viewed as an energy-saving technique reserved for temperate and subarctic climates; however, torpor use is common across several tropical bat families. Central America hosts a great diversity of bats with approximately 150 species, yet data from this area are lacking compared with tropical Africa and Australia. We investigated thermoregulatory responses of bats from neotropical Belize and captured adult bats in the tropical forests of Lamanai Archeological Reserve, Belize. After a 12 h acclimation period, we recorded rectal temperature prior to and after exposing bats to an ambient temperature (Ta) of 7 °C forupto 2 h in anenvironmental chamber. All 11 species across four families expressed torpor to some degree upon exposure to cool temperatures. Individuals from Vespertilionidae defended the lowest resting body temperature (Tb) and showed the greatest decrease in Tb after acute exposure to low Ta. Our data help to establish a new spectrum of physiological ability for this group of mammals and shed light on the evolution of torpor and heterothermy. Weshow that energy conservation is important even in warm and energetically stable environmental conditions. Understanding how and why torpor is used in warm climates will help to better define paradigms in physiological ecology. © 2017, Canadian Science Publishing. All rights reserved.
Publication
Canadian Journal of Zoology
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Date
2017
Volume
95
Issue
12
Pages
909-912
Journal Abbr
Can. J. Zool.
Citation Key
czenzeHotBatsGo2017
ISSN
00084301 (ISSN)
Archive
Scopus
Language
English
Extra
6 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Citation
Czenze, Z. J., & Dunbar, M. B. (2017). Hot bats go cold: Heterothermy in neotropical bats. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 95(12), 909–912. Scopus. https://doi.org/10.1139/cjz-2016-0318