The effect of short photoperiod and cold on metabolism and thermoregulation was investigated in pouched mice (Saccostomus campestris: Cricetidae) from three localities in southern Africa which experience contrasting climatic conditions. Mice were initially acclimated to long photoperiod (14L: 10D) at 25 degrees C, followed first by a decline in photoperiod (to 10L: 14D) and then by a fall in temperature (to 10 degrees C). Minimum observed metabolic rate (identical to basal metabolic rate) was unaffected by the decline in photoperiod but increased significantly following cold acclimation. Because minimal thermal conductance remained constant throughout the study the increase in minimum observed metabolic rate caused a decline in lower critical temperature to around 26 degrees C. In contrast to minimum observed metabolic rate, regulatory non-shivering thermogenesis improved significantly following the decline in both photoperiod and temperature. However, pouched mice from the warmest locality were significantly less responsive to photoperiod than those from the other two localities whose survival might depend upon their ability to accurately predict seasonal changes in temperature. Neither photoperiod nor temperature had any effect on body mass, yet pouched mice from the most arid locality, where food supply might be unpredictable, were significantly smaller and had lower total energy requirements than those from areas experiencing higher annual rainfall. These results indicate that S. campestris displays considerable geographical variation in energy requirements together with differences in the use of photoperiod as an anticipatory cue for predicting the onset of winter. These differences appear to be related to the availability of energy and the relative severity of climatic conditions in each locality.
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BMC Genomics
August 2023
Tumor Immunology Laboratory, LIFE Center, LMU Klinikum, University Munich, Munich, Germany.
Background: The evolution of pregnancy-specific glycoprotein (PSG) genes within the CEA gene family of primates correlates with the evolution of hemochorial placentation about 45 Myr ago. Thus, we hypothesized that hemochorial placentation with intimate contact between fetal cells and maternal immune cells favors the evolution and expansion of PSGs. With only a few exceptions, all rodents have hemochorial placentas thus the question arises whether Psgs evolved in all rodent genera.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
July 2020
Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States of America.
For rodents, olfaction is essential for locating food, recognizing mates and competitors, avoiding predators, and navigating their environment. It is thought that rodents may have expanded olfactory receptor repertoires in order to specialize in olfactory behavior. Despite being the largest clade of mammals and depending on olfaction relatively little work has documented olfactory repertoires outside of conventional laboratory species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vet Med Sci
January 2014
Hokkaido University Research Center for Zoonosis Control, N20W10, Kita-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaido 001-0020, Japan.
A total of 466 rodents were captured in the Republic of Zambia from 2006 to 2010. Based on morphological observations and phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial gene sequences, rodents were divided into 10 groups consisting of 39 Rattus rodents, 263 multimammate rats, 18 other Murinae rodents, 95 gerbils, 11 pouched mice, 1 giant-pouched rat, 38 fat mice and 1 dormouse. Rodent antibodies except that from Rattus were examined for their cross-reactivity to commercially available antibody detection reagents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vector Ecol
December 2008
Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
The removal of large herbivorous mammals can cause dramatic increases in the densities of small mammals. These small mammals are hosts for a variety of ectoparasites, many of which are important pathogens of human diseases such as plague and murine typhus. It is thus valuable from a human health perspective to understand if large herbivore removals can indirectly affect ectoparasite numbers and thus potentially alter disease risk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComp Med
August 2008
Comparative Medicine and Animal Resources Centre, McGill Life Sciences Complex, McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
Several strains of transgenic mice derived from an inbred FVB/NHsd colony developed large masses on 1 or both flanks. Although originally suspected to be a phenotypic anomaly related to genetic modifications, nontransgenic littermates subsequently were affected with equal frequency, inculpating the FVB/NHsd founder colony. The masses were subcutaneous, soft, and exophytic and appeared over the course of a few weeks.
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