Activity and Thermoregulation of the Antelope Ground Squirrel Ammospermophilus leucurus in Winter and Summer
- 1 April 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in Physiological Zoology
- Vol. 54 (2) , 215-223
- https://doi.org/10.1086/physzool.54.2.30155822
Abstract
Antelope ground squirrels rely on their extremely labile body temperatures ( ) to help maintain activity and energy balance at all seasons of the year. In summer, antelope ground squirrels employ hyperthermia to lengthen the duration of periods of surface activity by increasing the capacity for heat storage. The extent of hyperthermia increases with increasing environmental temperature. Periodically, the animals dissipate the stored heat passively by conduction in an underground burrow. This cycling of allows them to remain active in environmental conditions intolerable on a steady-state basis. The limits of apparently are adjusted to allow adequate durations of surface activity as well as rapid heat loss when the animals enter burrows, thus maximizing the ratio between time spent active and time spent dissipating heat. In winter, ground squirrels realize energy savings by lowering at night to 32-33 C.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Standard Operative Temperatures and Thermal Energetics of the Antelope Ground Squirrel Ammospermophilus leucurusPhysiological Zoology, 1981
- A heat transfer analysis of animals: Unifying concepts and the application of metabolism chamber data to field ecologyJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1976
- Hypothalamic thermosensitivity and regulation of heat storage behavior in a day-active desert rodentAmmospermophilus nelsoniJournal of Comparative Physiology A, 1976
- Oxygen consumption, thermal conductance, and torpor in the California pocket mouse Perognathus californicusJournal of Cellular and Comparative Physiology, 1965