Improved homeothermy and hypothermia in African lions during gestation

Author:

Trethowan Paul D.1ORCID,Hart Tom2,Loveridge Andrew J.1,Haw Anna3,Fuller Andrea3,Macdonald David W.1

Affiliation:

1. Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, The Recanati-Kaplan Centre, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

2. Ocean Research and Conservation Group, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

3. Brain Function Research Group, School of Physiology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

Abstract

Mammals use endogenously produced heat to maintain a high and relatively constant core body temperature ( T b ). How they regulate their T b during reproduction might inform us as to what thermal conditions are necessary for optimal development of offspring. However, few studies have measured T b in free-ranging animals for sufficient periods of time to encounter reproductive events. We measured T b continuously in six free-ranging adult female African lions ( Panthera leo ) for approximately 1 year. Lions reduced the 24 h amplitude of T b by about 25% during gestation and decreased mean 24 h T b by 1.3 ± 0.1°C over the course of the gestation, reducing incidences of hyperthermia ( T b > 39.5°C). The observation of improved homeothermy during reproduction may support the parental care model (PCM) for the evolution of endothermy, which postulates that endothermy arose in birds and mammals as a consequence of more general selection for parental care. According to the PCM, endothermy arose because it enabled parents to better control incubation temperature, leading to rapid growth and development of offspring and thus to fitness benefits for the parents. Whether the precision of T b regulation in pregnant lions, and consequently their reproductive success, will be influenced by changing environmental conditions, particularly hotter and drier periods associated with climate change, remains to be determined.

Funder

WildCRU, University of Oxford; Recanati-Kaplan Foundation; Panthera; University of Witwatersrand and the National Research Foundation, South Africa.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference27 articles.

1. Costs of reproduction in a long-lived female primate: injury risk and wound healing;Archie EA;AAPG Bull,2014

2. Pinheiro J Bates D DebRoy S Sarkar D R Development Core Team. 2015 nlme: linear and nonlinear mixed effects models. R package version 3.1-120. Vienna Austria: R Foundation for Statistical Computing. See http://CRAN.R-project.org/package=nlme (accessed 20 February 2015).

3. Simultaneous Inference in General Parametric Models

4. Data from: Improved homeothermy and hypothermia in African lions during gestation;Trethowan P;Dryad Digital Repository,2016

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