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Implications of aquatic hypothermia for dive performance in the semi-aquatic muskrat, Ondatra zibethicus

Posted on:2003-08-15Degree:M.ScType:Thesis
University:The University of Manitoba (Canada)Candidate:Hindle, Allyson GayleFull Text:PDF
GTID:2464390011488219Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:
The “adaptive hypothermia” hypothesis predicts that hypothermia, via the Q10 effect, reduces whole-body oxygen consumption by depressing metabolism of cooled tissues. This hypothesis has gained prevalence in large part due to published reports of dramatic body cooling in free-ranging animals foraging in cold water. Because the evidence to date implicating hypothermia as an oxygen sparing strategy is largely circumstantial, I undertook an investigation of the influences of mild hypothermia on the semi-aquatic muskrat diving voluntarily in a laboratory setting.; Pre-chilling elicited no overt behavioural changes to diving in adult muskrats. In fact, the only impact of hypothermia on the aquatic behaviour of adults was a tendency for hypothermic individuals to spend more total time immersed in cold water (P = 0.006).; Post-dive excess VO2 was higher for pre-chilled than for normothermic muskrats in short dives only. This discrepancy was eliminated for longer (2 min) dives, suggesting that a comparable or maximal dive response was achieved in both groups during longer dives, regardless of Tb.; In the youngest cohort tested (200–400 g), hypothermia was associated with elevated VO2 and decreased diving during continuous immersion. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)...
Keywords/Search Tags:Hypothermia
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