TL;DR: This study summarises climatic and microclimatic data for Ganab, 3 km from Tumasberg, and the following ecological and demographic information for the small mammal community; abundance and distribution, home range, activity patterns, recruitment and mortality rates, diet, and reproductive cycles of the small mammals.
Abstract: The small mammal community of Tumasberg, an inselburg on the gravel plains of the Namib Desert, was studied by mark-release-recapture methods. The principal small mammals present on a 6 hectare livetrapping grid were: Petromyscus collinus (rock mouse), Aethomys namaquensis (rock rat), Petromus typicus (dassie rat) and Elephantulus rupestris (rock elephant-shrew). This study summarises climatic and microclimatic data for Ganab, 3 km from Tumasberg, and the following ecological and demographic information for the small mammal community; abundance and distribution, home range, activity patterns, recruitment and mortality rates, diet, and reproductive cycles of the small mammals. These data are used to analyse the community structure and ecological interactions of the species.
TL;DR: Overall, E. rupestris showed a high degree of thermoregulatory plasticity, which was mainly reflected in a variable timing of torpor entry and arousal, comparable to what has been long known for many Holarctic rodents.
Abstract: We report on the seasonal metabolic adjustments of a small-sized member of the phylogenetically ancient Afrotheria, the Western rock elephant shrew (Elephantulus rupestris). We recorded body temperature (T
b) patterns and compared the capacity for adrenergically induced nonshivering thermogenesis (NST) in E. rupestris captured in the wild in summer and winter. Noradrenaline (NA) treatment (0.4–0.5 mg/kg, s.c.) induced a pronounced elevation in oxygen consumption compared to controls (saline), and the increase in oxygen consumption following injection of NA was 1.8-fold higher in winter compared to summer. This suggests that the smaller members of Afrotheria possess functional brown adipose tissue, which changes in thermogenic capacity depending on the season. Torpor was recorded in both seasons, but in winter the incidence of torpor was higher (n = 205 out of 448 observations) and minimal T
b during torpor was lower (T
bmin: 11.9°C) than in summer (n = 24 out of 674 observations; T
bmin: 26°C). In addition to cold, high air humidity emerged as a likely predictor for torpor entry. Overall, E. rupestris showed a high degree of thermoregulatory plasticity, which was mainly reflected in a variable timing of torpor entry and arousal. We conclude that E. rupestris exhibits seasonal metabolic adjustments comparable to what has been long known for many Holarctic rodents.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured body temperature (T(b)) in free-ranging individuals of two species of elephant shrews, namely, western rock elephant shrew (Elephantulus rupestris) and Cape rock elephant shifter (E. edwardii), during winter in a winter-rainfall region of western South Africa.
Abstract: We measured body temperature (T(b)) in free-ranging individuals of two species of elephant shrews, namely western rock elephant shrews (Elephantulus rupestris) and Cape rock elephant shrews (E. edwardii), during winter in a winter-rainfall region of western South Africa. These syntopic species have similar ecologies and morphologies and thus potential for large overlaps in diet and habitat use. Unexpectedly, they displayed different T(b) patterns. Western rock elephant shrews were heterothermic, with all individuals decreasing T(b) below 30°C on at least 34% of nights. The level of heterothermy expressed was similar to other species traditionally defined as daily heterotherms and was inversely related to T(a), as is commonly seen in small heterothermic endotherms. In contrast, Cape rock elephant shrews rarely allowed their T(b) to decrease below 30°C. The level of heterothermy was similar to species traditionally defined as homeotherms and there was no relationship between the level of heterothermy expressed and T(a). In both species, the minimum daily T(b) was recorded almost exclusively at night, often shortly before sunrise, although in some individuals minimum T(b) occasionally occurred during the day. The interspecific variation in T(b) patterns among Elephantulus species recorded to date reiterates the importance of ecological determinants of heterothermy that interact with factors such as body mass and phylogeny.
TL;DR: Both genetic and morphological data sets showed that all five species of Elephantulus examined were more closely related to each other than to either Petrodromus tetradactylus or Macroscelides proboscideus, but relationships within the Elephantulus differed among data sets.
TL;DR: Seven species (Elephantulus rupestris, Lepus saxatilis, Pronolagus crassicaudatus, Graphiurus murinus, Aethomys namaquensis, Desmodillus auricularis and Gerbillurus paeba) are new records for the park.
Abstract: Collecting in April 1971 yielded 74 specimens of 16 species. Of these, seven species (Elephantulus rupestris, Lepus saxatilis, Pronolagus crassicaudatus, Graphiurus murinus, Aethomys namaquensis, Desmodillus auricularis and Gerbillurus paeba) are new records for the park. Distribution in habitat-types for each species known to occur are described.