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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I sometimes do a little assembly about ants for kids, naturally I like everything to be correct, so I've been careful for years to always say "where do ants go in winter? they do something like hibernation but since they are insects and not warm-blooded we call it diapause."
Now I need to figure out what to say.
I'd rather just say "ants hibernate in winter" because they do it for the same reason as a bear or mouse, and it's similar in many ways.
But people get mad.
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I sometimes do a little assembly about ants for kids, naturally I like everything to be correct, so I've been careful for years to always say "where do ants go in winter? they do something like hibernation but since they are insects and not warm-blooded we call it diapause."
Now I need to figure out what to say.
I'd rather just say "ants hibernate in winter" because they do it for the same reason as a bear or mouse, and it's similar in many ways.
But people get mad.
Laptops hibernate. If it is good enough for them...
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I sometimes do a little assembly about ants for kids, naturally I like everything to be correct, so I've been careful for years to always say "where do ants go in winter? they do something like hibernation but since they are insects and not warm-blooded we call it diapause."
Now I need to figure out what to say.
I'd rather just say "ants hibernate in winter" because they do it for the same reason as a bear or mouse, and it's similar in many ways.
But people get mad.
It's been a long, long time since I was at school. I read "a little assembly about ants" and immediately visualised Meccano.
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I sometimes do a little assembly about ants for kids, naturally I like everything to be correct, so I've been careful for years to always say "where do ants go in winter? they do something like hibernation but since they are insects and not warm-blooded we call it diapause."
Now I need to figure out what to say.
I'd rather just say "ants hibernate in winter" because they do it for the same reason as a bear or mouse, and it's similar in many ways.
But people get mad.
@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.
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I sometimes do a little assembly about ants for kids, naturally I like everything to be correct, so I've been careful for years to always say "where do ants go in winter? they do something like hibernation but since they are insects and not warm-blooded we call it diapause."
Now I need to figure out what to say.
I'd rather just say "ants hibernate in winter" because they do it for the same reason as a bear or mouse, and it's similar in many ways.
But people get mad.
Well, maybe ant *nests* hibernate. I'd bet money that, like honeybee nests, they are endothermic.
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Well, maybe ant *nests* hibernate. I'd bet money that, like honeybee nests, they are endothermic.
Him! Interesting place for some Citizen Science!
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Well, maybe ant *nests* hibernate. I'd bet money that, like honeybee nests, they are endothermic.
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@futurebird @moira @Photo55 Ah, very cool. I was thinking more in terms of S. Invicta. Probly bigger biomass, even in winter.
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@futurebird @moira @Photo55 Ah, very cool. I was thinking more in terms of S. Invicta. Probly bigger biomass, even in winter.
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@futurebird @moira @Photo55 Ah, very cool. I was thinking more in terms of S. Invicta. Probly bigger biomass, even in winter.
And I know that they too are very concerned with humidity, moving up and down in the nest to stay comfortable.
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@futurebird I still want to live in the universe where "AI" meant "Wolfram Alpha with an absurd budget" and not "MegaHAL with an absurd budget"
@mcc @futurebird and they didn't even give us HAL
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Maybe just what you just said? “Ants do something like hibernation”. @moira @Photo55 @futurebird
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@mcc @futurebird and they didn't even give us HAL
@IngaLovinde @futurebird (MegaHAL was an open source chatbot program from around the year 2000 that, when given text input, added it to a markov chain text model and generated "conversational" responses. Back in the day I hooked it up to both IRC and AOL Instant Messenger, and I actually witnessed it passing the Turing Test, not because MegaHAL was smart, but because people are very prone to seeing the work of minds in random data.)
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@IngaLovinde @futurebird (MegaHAL was an open source chatbot program from around the year 2000 that, when given text input, added it to a markov chain text model and generated "conversational" responses. Back in the day I hooked it up to both IRC and AOL Instant Messenger, and I actually witnessed it passing the Turing Test, not because MegaHAL was smart, but because people are very prone to seeing the work of minds in random data.)
@mcc @futurebird oh I didn't know that, thought that your mention of MegaHAL was a reference to HAL (instead of referencing actual text generator that was named after HAL)
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@futurebird @lemgandi @moira @Photo55
S. invicta is native to tropical and subtropical parts of S. America, so I'd be surprised if their nests maintain substantial internal heat. It seems more likely their nests would evolve to get rid of heat.
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I don't know anymore.
diapause seems like the most general term? so everything that hibernates is in diapause.I need an Euler diagram STAT of:
hibernation
estivation (or aestivation?)
diapause
dormancy
brumation
napping
torporWith the differences and various example animals.
(If AI did what it claimed this would be a great task to ask from AI, but, in fact, this is the kind of thing LLMs are the worst at: making categorizations logically... and not making up animals)
@futurebird @Photo55 I can contribute a little.
Brumation is what reptiles and amphibians do. It's distinct from mammalian hibernation in several ways (and you probably know a lot more about invertebrate diapause than I do).
During brumation, reptiles and amphibians don't sleep all the time - they dramatically drop their metabolic rate, but will sometimes move around a bit. Unlike hibernating mammals, they need to drink water. Also unlike mammalian hibernation, brumating animals will usually fast for a week or two before entering brumation (rather than stuffing themselves like mammals do) - this is to make sure that there is nothing left in the gut that could start rotting while the metabolism is slowed. They burn glycogen and fat while brumating, but *very* little.
A couple anecdotal observations: I weighed Igor - my male Northern blue-tongue skink - before and after his first brumation in my care; he lost 7 grams (he weighed just under a kilo at the time). *Every* brumating reptile I've seen seems to have their brain running on a severely limited autopilot while it's going on: They know how to get water and getting back in the cave or box they're hiding in, but that's about it. I can very easily tell when Igor is just coming out for water and when winter's over by his gaze alone: When he's just coming out for water he looks "dim", when he's done brumating he makes eye contact, watches what's going on and looks much more like "the lights are on" in there.

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@futurebird @Photo55 I can contribute a little.
Brumation is what reptiles and amphibians do. It's distinct from mammalian hibernation in several ways (and you probably know a lot more about invertebrate diapause than I do).
During brumation, reptiles and amphibians don't sleep all the time - they dramatically drop their metabolic rate, but will sometimes move around a bit. Unlike hibernating mammals, they need to drink water. Also unlike mammalian hibernation, brumating animals will usually fast for a week or two before entering brumation (rather than stuffing themselves like mammals do) - this is to make sure that there is nothing left in the gut that could start rotting while the metabolism is slowed. They burn glycogen and fat while brumating, but *very* little.
A couple anecdotal observations: I weighed Igor - my male Northern blue-tongue skink - before and after his first brumation in my care; he lost 7 grams (he weighed just under a kilo at the time). *Every* brumating reptile I've seen seems to have their brain running on a severely limited autopilot while it's going on: They know how to get water and getting back in the cave or box they're hiding in, but that's about it. I can very easily tell when Igor is just coming out for water and when winter's over by his gaze alone: When he's just coming out for water he looks "dim", when he's done brumating he makes eye contact, watches what's going on and looks much more like "the lights are on" in there.

@datarama @futurebird @Photo55 Ah! Thank you! Now I can put a sign on my door as necessary which says 'brumating'. I definitely have weeks like that!
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@datarama @futurebird @Photo55 Ah! Thank you! Now I can put a sign on my door as necessary which says 'brumating'. I definitely have weeks like that!
@Bumblefish @datarama @futurebird tempting.
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@futurebird @Photo55 I can contribute a little.
Brumation is what reptiles and amphibians do. It's distinct from mammalian hibernation in several ways (and you probably know a lot more about invertebrate diapause than I do).
During brumation, reptiles and amphibians don't sleep all the time - they dramatically drop their metabolic rate, but will sometimes move around a bit. Unlike hibernating mammals, they need to drink water. Also unlike mammalian hibernation, brumating animals will usually fast for a week or two before entering brumation (rather than stuffing themselves like mammals do) - this is to make sure that there is nothing left in the gut that could start rotting while the metabolism is slowed. They burn glycogen and fat while brumating, but *very* little.
A couple anecdotal observations: I weighed Igor - my male Northern blue-tongue skink - before and after his first brumation in my care; he lost 7 grams (he weighed just under a kilo at the time). *Every* brumating reptile I've seen seems to have their brain running on a severely limited autopilot while it's going on: They know how to get water and getting back in the cave or box they're hiding in, but that's about it. I can very easily tell when Igor is just coming out for water and when winter's over by his gaze alone: When he's just coming out for water he looks "dim", when he's done brumating he makes eye contact, watches what's going on and looks much more like "the lights are on" in there.

@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. -
@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.@Photo55 @futurebird That's possible, but they *can* sleep through an entire winter without drinking; reptiles and amphibians can't.