Abstract
The durations of the intervals of torpor and euthermia during mammalian hibernation were found to be dependent on body mass. These relationships support the concept that the timing of body temperature changes is controlled by some metabolic process. Data were obtained from species spanning nearly three orders of magnitude in size, that were able to hibernate for over six months without food at 5°C. The timing of body temperature changes was determined from the records of copper-constantan thermocouples placed directly underneath each animal. Because all species underwent seasonal changes in their patterns of hibernation, animals were compared in midwinter when the duration of euthermic intervals was short and relatively constant and when the duration of torpid intervals was at its longest. Large hibernators remained euthermic longer than small hibernators (Fig. 2). This was true among and within species. The duration of euthermic intervals increased with mass at the same rate (mass0.38) that mass-specific rates of euthermic metabolism decrease, suggesting that hibernators remain at high body temperatures until a fixed amount of metabolism has been completed. These data are consistent with the theory that each interval of euthermia is necessary to restore some metabolic imbalance that developed during the previous bout of torpor. In addition, small species remained torpid for longer intervals, than large species (Fig. 3). The absolute differences between different-sized species were large, but, on a proportional basis, they were comparatively slight. Mass-specific rates of metabolism during torpor also appear to be much less dependent on body mass than those during euthermia, but the precision of these metabolic measurements is insufficient for them to provide a conclusive test of the metabolic theory. Finally, small species with high mass-specific rates of euthermic metabolism are under tighter energetic constraints during dormancy than large species. The data presented here show that, in midwinter, small species compensate both by spending less time at high body temperatures following each arousal episode and by arousing less frequently, although the former is far more important energetically than the latter.