“…Pangolins in our study, however, had mean body temperatures that were higher compared with those measured previously for Temminck’s pangolins in captivity (32–34°C; Boyles et al, 2019 ; Wicker et al, 2020 ) and for one animal in the wild (32–35°C; Pietersen, 2013 ). The highest (absolute maximum) body temperature (38.2°C) we measured was higher than the maximum body temperatures reported previously for any pangolin species in captivity (33.9–37.8°C, Jones, 1973 ; McNab, 1984 ; Heath and Hammel , 1986 ; Heath, 1987 ; Boyles et al, 2019 ; Challender et al, 2020 ; Yu et al, 2021 ) and almost 3°C higher than that previously reported for a wild Temminck’s pangolin (35.4°C), measured across 34 days in winter ( Pietersen, 2013 ). The lowest body temperature recorded for a pangolin in our study (28.9°C in March 2016) was within the range of minimum body temperatures recorded previously for captive animals (~27.6–33.4°C; McNab, 1984 ; Heath and Hammel, 1986 ; Heath, 1987 ; Yu et al, 2021 ) and similar to that recorded for a wild pangolin (29.5°C; Pietersen, 2013 ).…”