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Australian Journal of Zoology Australian Journal of Zoology Society
Evolutionary, molecular and comparative zoology
REVIEW

Hibernation and daily torpor in Australian and New Zealand bats: does the climate zone matter?1

Fritz Geiser https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7621-5049 A K , Artiom Bondarenco A , Shannon E. Currie A B , Anna C. Doty A C , Gerhard Körtner A , Bradley S. Law D , Chris R. Pavey A E , Alexander Riek A F , Clare Stawski A G , Christopher Turbill A H , Craig K. R. Willis A I and R. Mark Brigham A J
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Centre for Behavioural and Physiological Ecology, Zoology CO2, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia.

B Department of Evolutionary Ecology, Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Alfred-Kowalke Straße 17, 10315 Berlin, Germany.

C Department of Biology, California State University Bakersfield, Bakersfield, CA 93311, USA.

D NSW Primary Industries, Parramatta, NSW 2124, Australia.

E CSIRO Land and Water, PMB 44, Winnellie, NT 0822, Australia.

F Institute of Animal Welfare and Animal Husbandry, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, Dörnbergstraße 25/27, 29223 Celle, Germany.

G Department of Biology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim 7491, Norway.

H Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University, Richmond, NSW 2753, Australia.

I Department of Biology and Centre for Forest Interdisciplinary Research, University of Winnipeg, Winnipeg, MB R3B 2E9, Canada.

J Department of Biology, University of Regina, Regina, SK S4S 0A2, Canada.

K Corresponding author. Email: fgeiser@une.edu.au

Australian Journal of Zoology 67(6) 316-330 https://doi.org/10.1071/ZO20025
Submitted: 3 May 2020  Accepted: 18 August 2020   Published: 14 September 2020

Abstract

We aim to summarise what is known about torpor use and patterns in Australian and New Zealand (ANZ) bats from temperate, tropical/subtropical and arid/semiarid regions and to identify whether and how they differ. ANZ bats comprise ~90 species from 10 families. Members of at least nine of these are known to use torpor, but detailed knowledge is currently restricted to the pteropodids, molossids, mystacinids, and vespertilionids. In temperate areas, several species can hibernate (use a sequence of multiday torpor bouts) in trees or caves mostly during winter and continue to use short bouts of torpor for the rest of the year, including while reproducing. Subtropical vespertilionids also use multiday torpor in winter and brief bouts of torpor in summer, which permit a reduction in foraging, probably in part to avoid predators. Like temperate-zone vespertilionids they show little or no seasonal change in thermal energetics during torpor, and observed changes in torpor patterns in the wild appear largely due to temperature effects. In contrast, subtropical blossom-bats (pteropodids) exhibit more pronounced daily torpor in summer than winter related to nectar availability, and this involves a seasonal change in physiology. Even in tropical areas, vespertilionids express short bouts of torpor lasting ~5 h in winter; summer data are not available. In the arid zone, molossids and vespertilionids use torpor throughout the year, including during desert heat waves. Given the same thermal conditions, torpor bouts in desert bats are longer in summer than in winter, probably to minimise water loss. Thus, torpor in ANZ bats is used by members of all or most families over the entire region, its regional and seasonal expression is often not pronounced or as expected, and it plays a key role in energy and water balance and other crucial biological functions that enhance long-term survival by individuals.

Additional keywords: body temperature, fattening, heterothermy, metabolic rate, passive rewarming, regions, roosts, season.


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