PMID: 1211484Dec 1, 1975Paper

Responses to cold in the midbrain sonar center of hibernating and tropical bats

The American Journal of Physiology
D J HowellR Horst

Abstract

The central gray matter of the bat midbrain, when electrically stimulated, causes the animal to produce a string of species-specific biosonar cries. Changes in this response with progressive cooling were studied in tropical homeothermic bats and in temperate hibernating bats. The species of hibernators chosen often move between hibernacula in the winter, flying and echolocating at low body temperatures (Tb). It was found that the midbrain "sonar center" exhibits a differential response to cooling that depends on the thermal propensities of the animal and its natural environment. Tropical bats followed a Q10 similar to that reported for other nonhibernating mammals and ceased responding at Tb 14-15 degrees C. Temperate zone-hibernating bat brains showed a relative insensitivity to temperature change and still responded at Tb 4-5 degrees C. Individual sonar cries within a string showed that duration was correlated with temperature but amplitude was unaffected. The study provides data for the functional separation of some parameters of biosonar and gives further evidence for differential nervous function in eurythermal versus stenothermal animals.

Citations

Aug 4, 2010·Journal of Comparative Physiology. B, Biochemical, Systemic, and Environmental Physiology·Kailiang HuShuyi Zhang
Oct 31, 2016·Hearing Research·Kimberly E MillerEllen Covey

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