Using implanted miniature data loggers we measured brain, arterial blood and abdominal temperatures at 5-min intervals in two free-ranging eland (Tragelaphus oryx) in their natural habitat. The animals were subjected to a nychthemeral range of globe temperature which exceeded 40 degrees C. Arterial blood exhibited a moderate amplitude (2.3 degrees C) nychthemeral rhythm, with a temperature peak at 1600-1800 hours, and a trough in the early morning at 0600-0800 hours. Mean abdominal temperature was 0.2-0.3 degrees C lower than the corresponding blood temperature, and had a peak-to-trough amplitude of 2.6 degrees C. Brain temperature closely paralleled changes in blood temperature but usually exceeded blood temperature by about 0.5 degrees C. Sporadic episodes of selective brain cooling occurred in one animal, but the duration and magnitude of such cooling was small (less than 0.4 degrees C), and took place only well above the mode of blood temperature. Our results do not support the concept that eland routinely employ adaptive heterothermy and selective brain cooling to survive in their natural environment.
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