The upper limit of thermoneutrality is not indicative of thermotolerance in bats

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jtherbio.2024.103933
Shaun Welman , Ana M. Breit , Danielle L. Levesque , Julia Nowack
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Abstract

To assess the vulnerability of birds and mammals to climate change recent studies have used the upper critical limit of thermoneutrality (TUC) as an indicator of thermal tolerance. But, the association between TUC and thermal tolerance is not straightforward and most studies describe TUC based solely on a deviation in metabolism from basal levels, without also considering the onset of evaporative cooling. It was argued recently that certain torpor-using bat species who survived prolonged exposure to high ambient temperatures (i.e. high thermal tolerance) experienced during extreme heat events did so by entering torpor and using facultative heterothermy to thermoconform and save on body water. Assuming that TUC is indicative of thermal tolerance, we expect TUC in torpor-using species to be higher than that of species which are obligate homeotherms, albeit that this distinction is based on confirmation of torpor use at low temperatures. To test this prediction, we performed a phylogenetically informed comparison of bat species known to use torpor (n = 48) and homeothermic (n = 16) bat species using published thermoregulatory datasets to compare the lower critical limit of thermoneutrality (TLC) and TUC in relation to body temperature. The influence of diet, biogeographical region, body mass and basal metabolic rate (BMR) was also considered. Body mass had a positive relationship with BMR, an inverse relationship with TLC and no relationship with TUC. Normothermic body temperature scaled positively with BMR, TLC and TUC. There was no relationship between diet or region and BMR, but both influenced thermal limits. Torpor-using bats had lower body mass and body temperatures than homeothermic bats, but there was no difference in BMR, TLC and TUC between them. Exceptional examples of physiological flexibility were observed in 34 torpor-using species and eight homeothermic species, which included 15 species of bats maintaining BMR-level metabolism at ambient temperatures as high as 40 °C (and corresponding body temperatures ∼39.2 °C). However, we argue that TUC based on metabolism alone is not an appropriate indicator of thermal tolerance as it disregards differences in the ability of animals to tolerate higher levels of hyperthermia, importance of hydration status and capacity for evaporative cooling. Also, the variability in TUC based on diet challenges the idea of evolutionary conservatism and warrants further consideration.

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耐热性的上限并不代表蝙蝠的耐热性
为了评估鸟类和哺乳动物对气候变化的脆弱性,最近的研究采用了热中性临界上限(TUC)作为热耐受性的指标。但是,热中性临界上限与热耐受性之间的联系并不简单,大多数研究仅根据新陈代谢偏离基础水平来描述热中性临界上限,而没有考虑蒸发冷却的开始。最近有观点认为,在极端高温事件中,某些使用冬眠的蝙蝠物种在长时间暴露于高环境温度(即高热耐受性)的情况下存活了下来,它们是通过进入冬眠状态并利用面性异温来进行热变形和节约体内水分的。假定TUC是热耐受性的指标,我们预计使用冬眠的物种的TUC会高于必须使用恒温的物种,尽管这种区分是基于在低温下使用冬眠的确认。为了验证这一预测,我们利用已发表的体温调节数据集,对已知使用冬眠的蝙蝠物种(n = 48)和恒温蝙蝠物种(n = 16)进行了系统发育比较,比较了体温中性临界下限(TLC)和TUC与体温的关系。研究还考虑了饮食、生物地理区域、体重和基础代谢率(BMR)的影响。体重与基础代谢率呈正相关,与 TLC 呈反相关,与 TUC 无相关。正常体温与基础代谢率、TLC 和 TUC 呈正比。饮食或地区与基础代谢率之间没有关系,但两者都会影响体温极限。冬眠蝙蝠的体重和体温低于常温蝙蝠,但它们之间的基础代谢率、TLC和TUC没有差异。在 34 种使用冬眠的蝙蝠和 8 种使用恒温的蝙蝠中观察到了生理灵活性的特殊例子,其中包括 15 种在环境温度高达 40 °C(相应的体温为 39.2 °C)时仍能保持 BMR 水平的新陈代谢的蝙蝠。然而,我们认为,仅以新陈代谢为基础的TUC并不是热耐受性的适当指标,因为它忽略了动物耐受更高水平高热的能力差异、水合状态的重要性以及蒸发冷却能力。此外,基于饮食的 TUC 变异性对进化保守主义的观点提出了挑战,值得进一步考虑。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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