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Chebucto Regional Softball Club

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  3. If torpor isn't defined by body temperature but it's about "metabolic rate" then why is the diapause of the ants (other insects also participate) not considered torpor?
A forum for discussing and organizing recreational softball and baseball games and leagues in the greater Halifax area.

If torpor isn't defined by body temperature but it's about "metabolic rate" then why is the diapause of the ants (other insects also participate) not considered torpor?

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  • AmbulocetusA Ambulocetus

    @moira @futurebird @Photo55 I hate to interrupt, but it's an interesting coincidence that Lindsey Nicole just released a video about this very subject-- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EKMUucn-Pz4

    myrmepropagandistF This user is from outside of this forum
    myrmepropagandistF This user is from outside of this forum
    myrmepropagandist
    wrote last edited by
    #41

    @Ambulocetus @moira @Photo55

    That is the video that started my confusion. (I added it to fediTV, the shared youTube playlist that I've been trying to get people to add things they watch to)

    AmbulocetusA 2 Replies Last reply
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    • myrmepropagandistF myrmepropagandist

      @Ambulocetus @moira @Photo55

      That is the video that started my confusion. (I added it to fediTV, the shared youTube playlist that I've been trying to get people to add things they watch to)

      AmbulocetusA This user is from outside of this forum
      AmbulocetusA This user is from outside of this forum
      Ambulocetus
      wrote last edited by
      #42

      @futurebird @moira @Photo55 I suspected something like that. It did seem like a coincidence.

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      • myrmepropagandistF myrmepropagandist

        @Ambulocetus @moira @Photo55

        That is the video that started my confusion. (I added it to fediTV, the shared youTube playlist that I've been trying to get people to add things they watch to)

        AmbulocetusA This user is from outside of this forum
        AmbulocetusA This user is from outside of this forum
        Ambulocetus
        wrote last edited by
        #43

        @futurebird @moira @Photo55
        I occasionally get called out to do some animal relocation, and for the past decade or so, climate change has been disturbing the winter weather here. We will have 50 or 60 degree days right in the middle of a deep freeze.
        This wakes up the bats, and if the bats are in your attic, they can't go outside, so they come down into your living room looking for something to eat. They have no choice: it's either look for food or try to go back to sleep and hope you don't starve before spring. If they stay awake they won't make it.

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        • Solarbird :flag_cascadia:M Solarbird :flag_cascadia:

          @futurebird @Photo55 i mean this is all i got and it's not good

          SadieB This user is from outside of this forum
          SadieB This user is from outside of this forum
          Sadie
          wrote last edited by
          #44

          @moira @futurebird @Photo55
          *I* liked it a *lot!*

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          • That’s a morayB That’s a moray

            @futurebird @moira @Photo55 Is the difference: mammals>>Oh, seasons changing, better eat up so I can sleep! // ants>>Oh, seasons changing, better eat up before my body ceases to function!

            Don't...don't turtles hibernate?

            Wait. Noe I'm confused.

            Solarbird :flag_cascadia:M This user is from outside of this forum
            Solarbird :flag_cascadia:M This user is from outside of this forum
            Solarbird :flag_cascadia:
            wrote last edited by
            #45

            @Bumblefish @futurebird @Photo55 they BRUMATE! which is DIFFERENT! somehow

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            • MidgePhotoP MidgePhoto

              @datarama @futurebird
              It isn't any specialism of mine, but I gathered at least some hibernating placentals will wake up a bit on a warm day in winter, whether they go and get a sip of water I don't know.

              dataramaD This user is from outside of this forum
              dataramaD This user is from outside of this forum
              datarama
              wrote last edited by
              #46

              @Photo55 @futurebird Random tangential trivia: Aforementioned Igor is what you might call a placental reptile. Not in the sense that his species is in any way more closely related to placental mammals than all other reptiles are ... but, well, they have placentae. There are many reptiles that bear live young, but most of those are ovoviviparous and simply carry eggs inside their bodies until they hatch. Blue-tongues (and most of the rest of the wider group of large Oceanian skinks they belong to) take it a step further: They have a mammal-like placenta, umbilical cord and everything, and they live off nutrients from their mother during embryonic development, just like mammals. Newborns even have bellybuttons, though they heal entirely and are gone after the first moult. In some of those species (though not Northern blue-tongues like Igor) there is even extensive parental care; shingleback skink parents (who form lifelong pairs) will watch over their young for several months, and prehensile-tailed skinks live in large family groups with a mated parent pair or two and their young - some of which will stay with the group into early adulthood, taking part in guarding their younger siblings. Great Desert skinks live in large underground burrow complexes which a family can maintain across multiple generations.

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              • dataramaD datarama

                @Photo55 @futurebird Random tangential trivia: Aforementioned Igor is what you might call a placental reptile. Not in the sense that his species is in any way more closely related to placental mammals than all other reptiles are ... but, well, they have placentae. There are many reptiles that bear live young, but most of those are ovoviviparous and simply carry eggs inside their bodies until they hatch. Blue-tongues (and most of the rest of the wider group of large Oceanian skinks they belong to) take it a step further: They have a mammal-like placenta, umbilical cord and everything, and they live off nutrients from their mother during embryonic development, just like mammals. Newborns even have bellybuttons, though they heal entirely and are gone after the first moult. In some of those species (though not Northern blue-tongues like Igor) there is even extensive parental care; shingleback skink parents (who form lifelong pairs) will watch over their young for several months, and prehensile-tailed skinks live in large family groups with a mated parent pair or two and their young - some of which will stay with the group into early adulthood, taking part in guarding their younger siblings. Great Desert skinks live in large underground burrow complexes which a family can maintain across multiple generations.

                MidgePhotoP This user is from outside of this forum
                MidgePhotoP This user is from outside of this forum
                MidgePhoto
                wrote last edited by
                #47

                @datarama @futurebird
                (Fascinating. I meant to distinguish the two groups of placental mammals from the interesting Echidna-Platypus crowd. Echidnae are less good at handling heat than the marsupials are, and shut down in the middle of a lot of days, I gather.

                The various systems for it have probably developed and converged more than once even in mammals, I think, but there may be some shared primitives.

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