Tuesday, September 17, 2024
News

Large animals travel more slowly since they can't keep cool: Study

   SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

Washington | April 19, 2023 5:36:29 AM IST
According to a new study led by Alexander Dyer from the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) and the Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany, published in the open-access journal PLOS Biology, an animal's travelling speed is limited by how effectively it sheds the excess heat generated by its muscles.

An animal's capacity to travel is a crucial part of its survival and dictates where - and how far - it can migrate, find food and mates, and spread into new territories. This becomes even more challenging in a human-dominated world characterized by increasingly fragmented habitats and limited food and water resources under climate change.

Dyer and his colleagues developed a model to look at the relationship between animal size and traveling speed, using data from 532 species. While larger animals should be able to travel faster due to their longer wings, legs or tails, the researchers found that medium-sized animals typically have the fastest sustained speeds. The researchers attribute this to the fact that larger animals require more time to dissipate the heat that their muscles produce while moving, and therefore, they must travel more slowly to avoid overheating. They conclude that any animal's traveling speed can be explained by jointly considering how efficiently it uses energy and sheds heat.

"The new study provides a way to understand animal movement capacities across species and can be used to estimate any animal's traveling speed based on its size," says Dyer. "For example, this approach can be applied to predict whether an animal might be able to move between habitats fragmented by human development, even when the details of its biology are unknown."

Last author Dr. Myriam Hirt from iDiv and the University of Jena adds, "We anticipate that large animals are potentially more susceptible to the effects of habitat fragmentation in a warming climate than previously thought and therefore more prone to extinction. But this needs further investigation." (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE SCIENCE NEWS
Researchers discover changes in the brai...
Contrail avoidance is less likely to dam...
Long-term metastatic melanoma survival s...
Study finds how cancer develops when imm...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
'Lot of external force trying to impact ...
Punjab: BSF seizes heroin in Tarn Taran ...
PM Modi visits exhibition at 4th Global ...
UP CM Yogi Adityanath greets Uttarakhand...
'This is a drama...': MP CM Mohan Yadav ...
Karnataka: Rapid Action Force deployed a...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
"Great": German minister Svenja Sch... 
Sonakshi Sinha to Dulquer Salmaan, ... 
Kolkata rape-murder case: BJP to ho... 
Union Minister Piyush Goyal launche... 
"He asked what changes could be bro... 
Andhra Pradesh: CM Naidu pledges 72... 
PoJK activists criticises Pakistan'... 
Curfew relaxed in four Manipur dist...