Heat tolerance and evaporative cooling capacity in an arid-zone elephant shrew

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Authors

Chalwin‑Milton, Olivia J.B.
Freeman, Marc Trevor
McKechnie, Andrew E.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Abstract

Endotherms vary widely in their capacity to defend sublethal body temperature (Tb) during acute heat exposure. Interspecific variation in the upper thermal limits of small mammals remains poorly studied, particularly in taxa other than bats. We hypothesised that rupicolous elephant shrews (Macroscelidae), on account of their occupancy of above-ground rock crevices in hot habitats and rapid cursorial locomotion, have evolved pronounced heat tolerance capacities. To test this hypothesis, we quantified relationships between Tb, resting metabolic rate (RMR) and evaporative water loss (EWL) in western rock elephant shrews (Elephantulus rupestris) exposed to air temperature (Tair) approaching or exceeding Tb under conditions of low humidity representative of the study population’s arid, winter-rainfall habitat in western South Africa. Our data revealed a pronounced capacity to tolerate Tair > Tb, with E. rupestris tolerating Tair up to 48.0 ± 0.1 °C while defending Tb > 7 °C below Tair (maximum Tb = 41.64 ± 0.16 °C). Three behavioural pathways were employed to dissipate heat: open mouth panting, flattening their body posture, and nose-licking. At the highest experimental Tair values achieved, EWL increased 15.05-fold relative to normothermic levels and heat was dissipated evaporatively at rates equivalent to 174%—240% of metabolic heat production. The heat tolerance limit of Tair = 48 °C in E. rupestris is one of the highest yet recorded in a non-volant small mammal, and our data support the notion that elephant shrews possess a pronounced capacity to avoid lethal hyperthermia during acute heat exposure.

Description

DATA AVAILABILITY : Data is available from corresponding author on request.
RESEARCH INVOLVING HUMAN AND/OR ANIMAL PARTICIPANTS : Work was conducted under authorisation from the Northern Cape government (permit number FAUNA 0010/2021). All experimental work was approved by the South African National Biodiversity Institute’s Research Ethics and Scientific Committee (protocol P2020/24) and the Animal Ethics Committee of the University of Pretoria (NAS290/2020).

Keywords

Evaporation, Heat dissipation behaviour, Hyperthermia, Macroscelidae, Nose-licking, Panting, SDG-03: Good health and well-being, SDG-13: Climate action, SDG-15: Life on land

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-03:Good heatlh and well-being
SDG-13:Climate action
SDG-15:Life on land

Citation

Chalwin-Milton, O.J.B., Freeman, M.T., McKechnie, A.E. 2024, 'Heat tolerance and evaporative cooling capacity in an arid-zone elephant shrew', Mammalian Biology, vol. 104, pp. 549-557. https://DOI.org/10.1007/s42991-024-00431-5.