Surviving winter on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau: Pikas suppress energy demands and exploit yak feces to survive winter

John R. Speakman(University of Aberdeen), Qing‐Sheng Chi(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Łukasz Ołdakowski(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Haibo Fu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Quinn E. Fletcher(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Catherine Hambly(University of Aberdeen), Jacques Togo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xinyu Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Stuart B. Piertney(University of Aberdeen), Xinghao Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Liangzhi Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Paula Redman(University of Aberdeen), Lu Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Gang-Bin Tang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yongguo Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jianguo Cui(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Peter J. Thomson(University of Aberdeen), Zengli Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Paula Glover(University of Aberdeen), Olivia C. Robertson(University of Aberdeen), Yanming Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Dehua Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
July 19, 2021
Cited by 67Open Access
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Abstract

Significance Endothermic animals must survive periods of seasonally lowered temperature, coincident with lowered food supply. While we know much about hibernation and migration as survival strategies, the responses of nonhibernating, nonmigrating species are more opaque, yet how these animals survive such periods is important to understand their potential susceptibility to climate change. Here, we report on a 13-y study of a species of lagomorph (plateau pika) from the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. We show pikas suppress their metabolism in winter and exploit a novel food source (feces of its supposed competitor, the domestic yak), which may contribute to their survival. Deposition of a fat store in the fall and its progressive utilization was not part of the overwinter strategy.


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