Body Temperature Regulation in Domestic Dogs After Agility Trials: The Effects of Season, Training, Body Characteristics, Age, and Genetics.

William Andrew Russel, Ana Gabriela Jiménez, Kailey D Paul, Barbara C Hoopes, Ahmet Ay
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Abstract

An animal's body mass is said to be indirectly related to its rate of heat loss; that is, smaller animals with higher surface area to volume tend to lose heat faster than larger animals. Thus, thermoregulation should be related to body size, however, generalizable patterns are still unclear. Domestic dogs are a diverse species of endothermic mammals, including a 44-fold difference in body size. Previous work in sedentary dogs has determined that body size and other morphological variables tend to predict the thermoregulation of exercising pet dogs. Here, we aimed to address three questions: (1) whether thermoregulatory differences in domestic dogs across seasons are dictated strictly by external environmental temperatures or if individual thermal acclimation is affected by seasonal temperature variation, even indoors; (2) whether athleticism (or training experience) affects or changes thermoregulation in dogs, as it does in humans; and (3) whether thermoregulation in domestic dogs has a genetic basis. We obtained tympanic membrane (Tear) temperatures and thermal images to measure the rate of temperature change in the eyes, mouth, and nose of athletic dogs following an indoor agility trial. Additionally, we used image analysis to determine body morphology differences. We found body mass to play a strong role in thermoregulation in winter trials (Tmouth p = 0.017, Tnose p = 0.052) but a less determinate role in summer trials. We found distinct differences in thermoregulation patterns between winter and summer. Particularly, coat morphology and length may play different roles in thermoregulation across seasons. Additionally, we found that rates of mouth temperature change differ by an interaction between environmental temperature and training experience (p = 0.044), suggesting seasonal thermoregulation patterns in dogs depend on relative athleticism. Lastly, we found important genetic predictors of temperature change rate, such as GORAB and IGF1, as well as others that exert influence over body size, mitochondrial function, or coat characteristics. These genetic markers indicate markers similar to our whole-animal physiological results. Overall, our data suggest that domestic dogs demonstrate thermal acclimation across seasons, that athleticism changes thermoregulatory patterns in domestic dogs, and that body size-related genes are associated with thermoregulation in dogs.

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家犬敏捷性试验后体温调节:季节、训练、身体特征、年龄和遗传的影响。
据说动物的体重与它的热损失率有间接关系;也就是说,表面积与体积之比更高的小型动物往往比大型动物更快地失去热量。因此,体温调节应该与体型有关,然而,可推广的模式仍不清楚。家犬是一种不同种类的吸热哺乳动物,包括44倍的体型差异。先前对久坐不动的狗的研究已经确定,体型和其他形态变量倾向于预测运动宠物狗的体温调节。在这里,我们旨在解决三个问题:(1)不同季节家养狗的体温调节差异是否严格由外部环境温度决定,或者个体热适应是否受到季节温度变化的影响,即使是在室内;(2)运动能力(或训练经验)是否会像人类一样影响或改变狗的体温调节;(3)家犬的体温调节是否有遗传基础。在室内敏捷性试验后,我们获得了运动犬的鼓膜(撕裂)温度和热图像,以测量眼睛,嘴巴和鼻子的温度变化率。此外,我们使用图像分析来确定身体形态差异。我们发现体重在冬季试验中对体温调节起重要作用(Tmouth p = 0.017, Tnose p = 0.052),但在夏季试验中作用不太决定性。我们发现冬季和夏季的体温调节模式存在明显差异。特别是,被毛的形态和长度可能在不同季节的温度调节中起不同的作用。此外,我们发现口腔温度的变化率在环境温度和训练经验的相互作用下有所不同(p = 0.044),这表明狗的季节性体温调节模式取决于相对运动能力。最后,我们发现了温度变化率的重要遗传预测因子,如GORAB和IGF1,以及其他对体型、线粒体功能或皮毛特征产生影响的基因。这些遗传标记与我们的全动物生理结果相似。总的来说,我们的数据表明,家养狗在各个季节都表现出热适应性,运动能力改变了家养狗的体温调节模式,体型相关基因与狗的体温调节有关。
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来源期刊
Journal of experimental zoology. Part A, Ecological and integrative physiology
Journal of experimental zoology. Part A, Ecological and integrative physiology Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Molecular Biology
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
3.60%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Journal of Experimental Zoology – A publishes articles at the interface between Development, Physiology, Ecology and Evolution. Contributions that help to reveal how molecular, functional and ecological variation relate to one another are particularly welcome. The Journal publishes original research in the form of rapid communications or regular research articles, as well as perspectives and reviews on topics pertaining to the scope of the Journal. Acceptable articles are limited to studies on animals.
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