Rare and Opportunistic Use of Torpor in Mammals—An Echo from the Past?

Author:

Nowack Julia1ORCID,Stawski Clare2ORCID,Geiser Fritz3ORCID,Levesque Danielle L4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University , L3 3AF Liverpool , UK

2. School of Science, Technology and Engineering, University of the Sunshine Coast (USC) , Maroochydore DC, QLD 4558 , Australia

3. Centre for Behavioural and Physiological Ecology, Zoology, University of New England , Armidale, NSW 2351 , Australia

4. School of Biology and Ecology, University of Maine , Orono, ME 04469 , USA

Abstract

Synopsis Torpor was traditionally seen as a winter survival mechanism employed by animals living in cold and highly seasonal habitats. Although we now know that torpor is also used by tropical and subtropical species, and in response to a variety of triggers, torpor is still largely viewed as a highly controlled, seasonal mechanism shown by Northern hemisphere species. To scrutinize this view, we report data from a macroanalysis in which we characterized the type and seasonality of torpor use from mammal species currently known to use torpor. Our findings suggest that predictable, seasonal torpor patterns reported for Northern temperate and polar species are highly derived forms of torpor expression, whereas the more opportunistic and variable forms of torpor that we see in tropical and subtropical species are likely closer to the patterns expressed by ancestral mammals. Our data emphasize that the torpor patterns observed in the tropics and subtropics should be considered the norm and not the exception.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Company of Biologists

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Animal Science and Zoology

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