scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Sliding set points for body weight in ground squirrels during the hibernation season

N Mrosovsky, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1970 - 
- Vol. 48, Iss: 2, pp 241-247
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
It is suggested that, even when ground squirrels are losing weight over the winter, they regulate their weight, but at a level that progressively declines, and the underlying mechanisms probably depend on adjustments to the balance between medial and lateral hypothalamic areas.
Abstract
The duration of the hibernation season of 13-lined ground squirrels, Citellus tridecemlineatus, repeatedly aroused over the winter, was only slightly less than that of undisturbed animals. The aroused animals ate more than eight times as much food during the middle of their hibernation season. This suggests that ground squirrels compensate by increased food intake for extra energy expenditure forced on them by repeated arousals. Aroused animals deprived of food lost weight at a greater rate than undisturbed animals. When food was returned they gained weight rapidly. However, weights did not return to predeprivation levels, but only to levels appropriate for the stage of the cycle at the time food was returned. These findings suggest that, even when ground squirrels are losing weight over the winter, they regulate their weight, but at a level that progressively declines. The underlying mechanisms probably depend on adjustments to the balance between medial and lateral hypothalamic areas.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

ANNUAL LIPID CYCLES IN HIBERNATORS: Integration of Physiology and Behavior

TL;DR: The unique manner in which hibernators are controlled during the annual cycle, especially lipid reserves, makes them valuable and promising models for research into the mechanisms underlying these processes in all mammals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Set points for body weight and fat

TL;DR: The term set point can be valuable in the descriptive, the functional, and the control system sense but is liable to confuse issues if it is not made clear in which sense it is being used.
Journal ArticleDOI

Absence of post-fast food compensation in the golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus).

TL;DR: Hamsters' nocturnal rhythms of eating and drinking were remarkably stable in the face of all the experimental manipulations, and hamsters, as well as rats, were quite effective in compensating for changes in diet density; a 1:1 dilution of a liquid diet produced a prompt doubling in the volume of diet ingested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular and metabolic aspects of mammalian hibernation

TL;DR: The seasonal changes in body tem-perature that occur in an arctic groundsquirrel and the ability to pass winter by while in a torpid state of lethargy are studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hibernation and circannual rhythms of food consumption in marmots and ground squirrels

TL;DR: It is possible that the circannual rhythm controls some physiological functions, while a circadian clock controls other functions, and that some physiological processes are controlled by annual clocks and others by circadian clocks.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Rhythmical arousal from hibernation in the golden-mantled ground squirrel, citellus lateralis tescorum

TL;DR: Preliminary data indicate that arousals are more frequent the higher the environmental temperature (up to 70–75° F), and adult males were found to arouse more frequently than did adult females or the juveniles of either sex.
Related Papers (5)