INVESTIGADORES
VALENTINUZZI veronica Sandra
artículos
Título:
The interplay of energy balance and daily timing of activity in a subterranean rodent: A laboratory and field approach
Autor/es:
TACHINARDI, PATRICIA; VALENTINUZZI, VERÓNICA S.; ODA, GISELE A.; LORENBUCK, C.
Revista:
PHYSIOLOGICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL ZOOLOGY
Editorial:
UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
Referencias:
Año: 2017 vol. 90 p. 546 - 552
ISSN:
1522-2152
Resumen:
The tuco-tuco (Ctenomys aff. knighti) is among the rodent species known to be nocturnal under standard laboratory conditions and diurnal under natural conditions. The circadian thermoenergetics (CTE) hypothesis postulates that switches in activity timing are a response to energetic challenges; daytime activity reduces thermoregulatory costs by consolidatingactivity tothewarmestpartof the day. Studying wild animals under both captive and natural conditions can increase understanding of how temporal activity patterns are shaped by the environment and could serve as a test of the CTE hypothesis. Weestimated the effects of activity timing on energy expenditure for the tuco-tuco by combining laboratory measurements of metabolic rate with environmental temperature records in both winter and summer. We showed that, in winter, there would be considerable energy savings if activity is allocated at least partially during daylight, lending support to the CTE hypothesis. In summer, the impact of activity timing on energy expenditure is small, suggesting that during this season other factors, such as predation risk, water balance, and social interaction, may have more important roles than energetics in the determination of activity time.