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Body temperature, activity patterns and hunting in free-living cheetah: biologging reveals new insights

Authors :
Robyn S. Hetem
Brenda A. de Witt
Duncan Mitchell
Andrea Fuller
Shane K. Maloney
Linda G. Fick
Leith C. R. Meyer
Source :
Integrative Zoology. 14:30-47
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

As one of the few felids that is predominantly diurnal, cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) can be exposed to high heat loads in their natural habitat. Little is known about long-term patterns of body temperature and activity (including hunting) in cheetahs because long-term concurrent measurements of body temperature and activity have never been reported for cheetahs, or, indeed, for any free-living felid. We report here body temperature and locomotor activity measured with implanted data loggers over 7 months in 5 free-living cheetahs in Namibia. Air temperature ranged from a maximum of 39 °C in summer to -2 °C in winter. Cheetahs had higher (∼0.4 °C) maximum 24-h body temperatures, later acrophase (∼1 h), with larger fluctuations in the range of the 24-h body temperature rhythm (approximately 0.4 °C) during a hot-dry period than during a cool-dry period, but maintained homeothermy irrespective of the climatic conditions. As ambient temperatures increased, the cheetahs shifted from a diurnal to a crepuscular activity pattern, with reduced activity between 900 and 1500 hours and increased nocturnal activity. The timing of hunts followed the general pattern of activity; the cheetahs hunted when they were on the move. Cheetahs hunted if an opportunity presented itself; on occasion they hunted in the midday heat or in total darkness (new moon). Biologging revealed insights into cheetah biology that are not accessible by traditional observer-based techniques.

Details

ISSN :
17494877
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Integrative Zoology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f41f55894c644cee89805cdea79fd856