The availability of thermal refuges shapes the thermoregulatory behavioural tactic of a heat-sensitive alpine endotherm species.
Alexis Malagnino,
Nicolas Courbin,
Nadège Bonnot
et al.
Abstract:With the ongoing rise in global average temperatures, animals are expected to increasingly dedicate their time and energy to thermoregulation. In response to high temperatures, animals typically either seek for and move into thermal refuges, or reduce their activity during the hottest hours of the day. Yet, the often lower resource availability in thermal refuges, combined with the reduction of foraging activity, may create indirect energetic costs of behavioural thermoregulation, forcing individuals to furthe… Show more
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