A
baby numbat observed during the study. Credit: Curtin University
Australia
is known for its wonderous and unique wildlife. But, just like the rest of the
world, Australia is expected to get even hotter due to climate change. This
could spell disaster for many of the marsupials that call the drier regions of
the country home as it may get too hot for them to handle.
To make things even more difficult, many
of these marsupials are endangered thanks to habitat loss and introduced species such as domestic cats and
red foxes. Therefore, finding a way to study these animals without disturbing
them is critical to ensure their survival.
This realization led Christine Cooper
(Curtin University, Australia) and Philip Withers (University of Western
Australia) to use infrared cameras and computer models to figure out how hot it
can get before the numbat (Myrmecobius fasciatus) can't take the heat. They
have published their findings in the Journal
of Experimental Biology.
The researchers found that high air and ground temperatures limit how long numbats can forage in the sun to ~10 minutes, after which the animals have to retreat to the shade. Under even more extreme conditions, the high temperatures of their surroundings along with the heat radiating from objects in the environment and the humidity may threaten numbat survival even in the shade.
Thermal vision of numbat from study. Credit:
Curtin University
Cooper and Withers drove around the
forest paths of two Western Australian wheatbelt reserves—Dryandra Woodland and
Boyagin Nature Reserve—during 2020 and 2021 to film ~50 numbats using their
infrared camera. The researchers also used a portable weather station to
measure the air temperature, relative humidity, solar radiation and wind speed, which they combined to get a measure of the true
environmental temperature.
Numbats are
the only marsupials that are solely active during the day. In fact, the team
found the marsupials are in the sun 62% of the time. So, what does being in the
sun do to the numbats' temperature?
Cooper and
Withers measured the surface temperatures of different areas of the numbat's
body when the numbats were in the sun and in the shade. Unsurprisingly, the
researchers found that direct sunlight made the numbats gain heat
quickly. But being in direct sunlight only accounted for 18% of the heat that
the numbats gained, so the numbats must be gaining heat from somewhere else. In
fact, the numbats that tried to cool off by retreating to the shade at high
temperatures were still gaining heat, despite being out of the direct sun.
This led the
researchers to conclude that heat from the air and ground, along with the heat
radiating from objects in their environment, are the main sources of heat
contributing to a numbat's risk of overheating. Because of this, the team
concluded that soon, even the shade will be too hot to help numbats to keep
cool.
Cooper and
Withers next calculated how long the numbats could search for their food before
their body temperature warmed up to 40°C (the hottest body temperature recorded
for an active numbat). The team found that if the air and ground temperatures
(not the temperature in direct sunlight) increased to 23°C, the numbats were
only able to remain in the sun for 10 minutes before their body temperature
reached 40°C.
This poses a
huge problem for the numbats as their only food source is termites. Termites
aren't very nutritious, so numbats have to eat large numbers of them to
survive. Termites live deep underground and only move toward the surface once
the ground warms up during the day. This means numbats can only feed in
daytime, when the sun has warmed the ground enough for the insects to be close
to the surface, within easy reach.
Thanks to climate change, the future for numbats is looking bleak. They can't forage at night when the temperature drops because their food will be too far underground for them to reach and they will be vulnerable to predators, nor can they survive in the shade if the climate keeps warming as predicted, because of the increasing heat stored in the air and rocks. Something must be done to stop the rise in global temperatures or one of Australia's iconic marsupials could become another tragic example of a creature we could have saved.
Source: Climate change spells disaster for termite-loving numbats (phys.org)
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