Meheretu, Yonas
- Department of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
- Mekelle University
- The Czech Academy of Sciences
Research article2023Peer reviewed
Lovy, M.; Boratynski, Z.; Okrouhlik, J.; Svaeinova, L.; Meheretu, Y.; Sumbera, R.
Animals inhabiting high altitudes are exposed to low ambient temperatures and hypobaric hypoxic conditions. Such dual environmental pressure reinforces mechanisms to counteract demanding thermal environment and, at the same time, physiological constraints of reduced partial oxygen pressure. We investigated how a community of rodents inhabiting the Ethiopian Highlands responded to such dual pressure. We measured internal organ masses (spleen, kidney, liver, heart, and interscapular brown adipose tissue) and fur properties (length and density of hairs) in Arvicanthis blicki, Lophuromys flavopunctatus, Otomys helleri, Stenocephalemys albocaudatus, S. sokolovi, and S. albipes. Phylogenetic vector and mixed regression analyses showed that all species, except for A. blicki, had large internal organs and long and/or dense fur, indicative of high internal heat production and good insulation properties. Instead, A. blicki had the largest interscapular brown adipose tissue, but the poorest fur insulation. The link between organ masses and fur insulation suggests different physiological heat economics among the rodent species. Furthermore, O. helleri had the most similar lengths of hind and forelimbs, indicative of cursorial locomotion, that coincides in this species with large spleen. Cursorial species, which depend on endurance running, may require large spleens to secure a storage and on-demand release of red blood cells for aerobic physiology during prolonged exercise in high altitudes. Altogether these findings suggest different mechanisms of maintaining thermal and exercise performance under inseparable hypoxic-thermal conditions of the high-altitude environment among the studied rodents.
vital organ masses; brown adipose tissue; fur; ecological adaptations; high altitude; thermoregulation; hypoxia; rodents
Journal of Zoology
2023, volume: 319, number: 2, pages: 119-130
Publisher: WILEY
Evolutionary Biology
Zoology
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/119566