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1.
Bioscience ; 73(3): 182-195, 2023 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37128248

RESUMEN

The people of three primeval cultures lived naked or nearly naked in regions where they experienced air temperatures of ± 5 degrees Celsius during cold seasons. These were the Australian Aboriginal peoples, the Bushmen of southern Africa, and the Yamana and the Alakaluf of Tierra del Fuego. Recent meta-analyses of data on human metabolic rate and metabolic endurance enable a quantitative demonstration of feasibility: Thermoregulation at winter air temperatures while naked was feasible in the three cultures for significantly longer than 50-180 days per year (sufficient for the duration of winter). Considering the life histories of the people, their estimated, time-averaged daily (24 hours) metabolic rates in winter were 2.6 times basal-similar to the highest daily rates empirically measured in extant peoples. Although the primeval peoples' way of life was metabolically expensive, it was as feasible as the lifestyles of peoples in today's world who live at the upper bound of the metabolically possible.

2.
Biol Lett ; 14(6)2018 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29899125

RESUMEN

The giant clam Tridacna crocea, native to Indo-Pacific coral reefs, is noted for its unique ability to bore fully into coral rock and is a major agent of reef bioerosion. However, T. crocea's mechanism of boring has remained a mystery despite decades of research. By exploiting a new, two-dimensional pH-sensing technology and manipulating clams to press their presumptive boring tissue (the pedal mantle) against pH-sensing foils, we show that this tissue lowers the pH of surfaces it contacts by greater than or equal to 2 pH units below seawater pH day and night. Acid secretion is likely mediated by vacuolar-type H+-ATPase, which we demonstrate (by immunofluorescence) is abundant in the pedal mantle outer epithelium. Our discovery of acid secretion solves this decades-old mystery and reveals that, during bioerosion, T. crocea can liberate reef constituents directly to the soluble phase, rather than producing sediment alone as earlier assumed.


Asunto(s)
Bivalvos/metabolismo , Epitelio/química , Ácidos/metabolismo , Animales , Bivalvos/química , Arrecifes de Coral , Concentración de Iones de Hidrógeno , ATPasas de Translocación de Protón/análisis
3.
Physiol Biochem Zool ; 95(6): 474-483, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36098657

RESUMEN

AbstractBased on the synthesis of data on metabolic rates of 15 species investigated at moderate ambient temperatures, nestlings of most studied species of altricial rodents and lagomorphs exhibit thermoregulatory control of thermogenesis within 3 d after birth, signifying that they express physiological thermoregulation for 86%-100% of their time as nestlings. Classifying nestlings as ectotherms (or poikilotherms) is thus inappropriate and fosters misconceptions regarding their body temperatures (Tb's), control of Tb-sensitive functions (e.g., cardiac output), and energetics of development. The fact that nestlings live as litters in nests means that their thermoregulatory capacities in their actual, natural lives often far exceed the capacities they exhibit as isolated individuals-pointing to a pressing need for improved understanding of the physiology of litters. Litters in nests are already known in two cases to exhibit true homeothermy at ages when individuals studied in isolation express only modest thermoregulatory abilities. Golden (Syrian) hamster nestlings are exceptional, requiring 2 wk to develop thermoregulatory thermogenesis. They are properly considered ectotherms at up to 2 wk of age, helping to clarify that most species-being dramatically different-are not.


Asunto(s)
Lagomorpha , Animales , Temperatura Corporal , Regulación de la Temperatura Corporal/fisiología , Roedores , Termogénesis
4.
J Comp Physiol B ; 192(1): 193-206, 2022 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34677660

RESUMEN

Previous research demonstrated that cities are similar to individual mammals in their relationship between the rate of energy use for heating and outdoor air temperature (Ta). At Tas requiring heating of indoor living spaces, the energy-Ta plot of a city contains information on city-wide thermal insulation (I), making it possible to quantify city-wide I by use of the city as the unit of measure. We develop methods for extracting this insulation information, deriving the methods from prior research on mammals. Using these methods, we address the question: in North America, are cities built in particularly cold locations constructed in ways that provide greater thermal insulation than ones built in thermally more moderate locations? Using data for 42 small and medium-size cities and two information-extraction methods, we find that there is a statistically significant inverse relationship between city-wide I and T10-year, the average city Ta over a recent 10-year period (range of T10-year: - 11 to 26 °C). This relationship represents an energy-conserving trend, indicating that cities in cold climates have greater built-in thermal insulation than cities in warm climates. However, the augmentation of insulation in cold climates is only about half as great as would be required to offset fully the increased energy cost of low Tas in a cold climate, and T10-year explains just 5-11% of the variance in measured insulation, suggesting that cities in North America vary greatly in the extent to which thermal insulation has been a priority in city development.


Asunto(s)
Clima , Frío , Animales , Ciudades , América del Norte , Temperatura
5.
J Comp Physiol B ; 191(1): 1-16, 2021 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33090252

RESUMEN

Of all the properties of individual animals of interest to comparative physiologists, age and stage of development are among the most consequential. In a natural population of any species, the survivorship curve is an important determinant of the relative abundances of ages and stages of development. Demography, thus, has significant implications for the study of comparative physiology. When Edward Deevey published his influential summary of survivorship in animal populations in the wild seven decades ago, he emphasized "serious deficiencies" because survivorship curves for natural populations at the time did not include data on the earliest life stages. Such data have accumulated over intervening years. We survey, for the first time, empirical knowledge of early-age survivorship in populations of most major animal groups in a state of nature. Despite wide variation, it is almost universally true that > 50% of newly born or hatched individuals die before the onset of sexual maturity, even in species commonly assumed to exhibit high early-age survivorship. These demographic facts are important considerations for studies in comparative and environmental physiology whether physiologists (i) aim to elucidate function throughout the life cycle, including both early stages and adults, or (ii) focus on adults (in which case early-age survivorship can potentially affect adult characteristics through selection or epigenesis). We establish that Deevey's Type I curve (which applies to species with relatively limited early mortality) has few or no actual analogs in the real, natural world.


Asunto(s)
Fisiología Comparada , Adolescente , Animales , Demografía , Humanos , Dinámica Poblacional
6.
J Comp Physiol B ; 187(5-6): 705-713, 2017 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28349198

RESUMEN

The neonates of many rodent species survive deep hypothermia (T b = 0-8 °C). In key respects, this hypothermia is more akin to hibernation than was thought during much of the twentieth century, indicating that studies of neonatal hypothermia may usefully supplement studies of hibernation in understanding evolved tissue adaptations to near-freezing T b. To clarify evolutionary diversity in neonatal survival of deep hypothermia, neonates of six species or strains were subjected to a standardized procedure: exposure for 2.5 h to test T bs followed by autoresuscitation. Mus and Peromyscus differed dramatically, the lowest T b survived by all ages studied (3-10 days) being 7-8 °C in Mus and 0-1 °C in Peromyscus. There was, however, no evidence of intrageneric plasticity because feral and laboratory Mus were identical, and Peromyscus species with cold- and warm-climate distribution ranges were identical. When neonates survive deep hypothermia, a key question is whether the experience is benign, meaning neonates tolerate hypothermia. To test the benign nature of deep hypothermia, neonates of Peromyscus leucopus were exposed four times (3 h each) to T b = 1-2 °C when 3-10 days old; controls were same-sex siblings not hypothermia exposed. When 74 such sibling pairs were exposed after weaning to predation by screech owls, the hypothermia-treated and control siblings did not differ in which was caught first. Based on study of deaths in 253 sibling pairs prior to weaning while under parental care, parents cared for hypothermia-treated siblings as attentively as controls. The results indicate that the experience of multiple neonatal deep-hypothermic episodes is benign in P. leucopus.


Asunto(s)
Aclimatación/fisiología , Hibernación/fisiología , Hipotermia/fisiopatología , Animales , Animales Recién Nacidos , Temperatura Corporal , Femenino , Masculino , Ratones , Peromyscus , Conducta Predatoria , Estrigiformes/fisiología
7.
J Comp Psychol ; 102(1): 44-48, 1988 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3365944

RESUMEN

In certain species of nonhibernating rodents, although young nestlings cease breathing and heart action when their body temperature is lowered to near freezing, the nestlings need only be rewarmed to recover. This remarkable capacity for immediate recovery has been known many years, but long-range consequences of deep neonatal hypothermia have never before been investigated. Mice (Peromyscus leucopus) that had been exposed to four 2.5-hr episodes of deep (2-4 degrees C) hypothermia when 4-10 days old were later compared with littermate controls in their performance on two learning tasks. The two groups did not differ in their acquisition or extinction of a lithium-induced learned taste aversion to sucrose. Nor did they differ in learning to find a hidden platform in a swimming pool. Thus in a nonhibernating rodent species, deep hypothermia experienced neonatally--unlike similar hypothermia administered in adulthood--seems not to induce deficits in subsequent learning capabilities. The resistance of neonates to damage probably represents an adaptation, for their modest thermoregulatory abilities render them vulnerable to deep hypothermia in frigid environments.


Asunto(s)
Animales Recién Nacidos/fisiología , Regulación de la Temperatura Corporal , Encéfalo/fisiología , Aprendizaje/fisiología , Peromyscus/fisiología , Animales , Reacción de Prevención/fisiología , Frío/efectos adversos , Femenino , Masculino , Orientación/fisiología , Gusto/fisiología
8.
PLoS One ; 9(3): e91823, 2014.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24632897

RESUMEN

The vertical zonation patterns of intertidal organisms have been topics of interest to marine ecologists for many years, with interspecific food competition being implicated as a contributing factor to intertidal community organization. In this study, we used behavioral bioassays to examine the potential roles that interspecific aggression and food competition have on the structuring of intertidal hermit crab assemblages. We studied two ecologically similar, sympatric hermit crab species, Clibanarius digueti [1] and Paguristes perrieri [2], which occupy adjacent zones within the intertidal region of the Gulf of California. During the search phase of foraging, C. digueti showed higher frequencies of aggressive behaviors than P. perrieri. In competition assays, C. digueti gained increased access to food resources compared to P. perrieri. The results suggest that food competition may play an important role in structuring intertidal hermit crab assemblages, and that the zonation patterns of Gulf of California hermit crab species may be the result of geographical displacement by the dominant food competitor (C. digueti).


Asunto(s)
Agresión , Anomuros , Conducta Animal , Conducta Alimentaria , Simpatría , Animales , Femenino , Masculino
9.
PLoS One ; 8(10): e76238, 2013.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24143181

RESUMEN

The physiological maintenance of a stable internal temperature by mammals and birds - the phenomenon termed homeothermy - is well known to be energetically expensive. The annual energy requirements of free-living mammals and birds are estimated to be 15-30 times higher than those of similar-size ectothermic vertebrates like lizards. Contemporary humans also use energy to accomplish thermoregulation. They are unique, however, in having shifted thermoregulatory control from the body to the occupied environment, with most people living in cities in dwellings that are temperature-regulated by furnaces and air conditioners powered by exogenous energy sources. The energetic implications of this strategy remain poorly defined. Here we comparatively quantify energy costs in cities, dwellings, and individual human bodies. Thermoregulation persists as a major driver of energy expenditure across these three scales, resulting in energy-versus-ambient-temperature relationships remarkably similar in shape. Incredibly, despite the many and diversified uses of network-delivered energy in modern societies, the energy requirements of six North American cities are as temperature-dependent as the energy requirements of isolated, individual homeotherms. However, the annual per-person energy cost of exogenously powered thermoregulation in cities and dwellings is 9-28 times higher than the cost of endogenous, metabolic thermoregulation of the human body. Shifting the locus of thermoregulatory control from the body to the dwelling achieves climate-independent thermal comfort. However, in an era of amplifying climate change driven by the carbon footprint of humanity, we must acknowledge the energetic extravagance of contemporary, city-scale thermoregulation, which prioritizes heat production over heat conservation.


Asunto(s)
Regulación de la Temperatura Corporal , Ciudades , Vestuario , Metabolismo Energético , Humanos , Masculino , Estadística como Asunto , Temperatura , Adulto Joven
10.
J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci ; 878(21): 1809-16, 2010 Jul 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20627732

RESUMEN

A convenient procedure for determination of seven betaine analogs and dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) in extracts of coral tissues using LC-MS stable isotope dilution is described. Extraction procedures were optimized for selective extraction of polar metabolites from coral tissues. The LC-MS protocol employed a pentafluorophenylpropyl (PFPP) column for HPLC separation, with chromatographic resolution of isobaric and isomeric zwitterionic metabolites optimized by adjusting the acidity of the mobile phase. A ternary gradient was used to exploit the unusual retention characteristics of cationic metabolites on the PFPP column, with incorporation of ammonium acetate in a later gradient stage promoting elution of more hydrophobic betaines which are retained at high organic content in the absence of ammonium acetate. We demonstrate that the new LC-MS based method provides accurate measurements from nanomolar to high micromolar concentrations, and can be applied for profiling of betaine metabolites and DMSP in corals or other aquatic organisms.


Asunto(s)
Antozoos/química , Betaína/análisis , Cromatografía Liquida/métodos , Espectrometría de Masa por Láser de Matriz Asistida de Ionización Desorción/métodos , Compuestos de Sulfonio/análisis , Aminoácidos , Animales , Betaína/química , Marcaje Isotópico , Modelos Lineales , Estándares de Referencia , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Sensibilidad y Especificidad , Compuestos de Sulfonio/química
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