Role of the sweating from the tail in the thermal balance of the rat-kangaroo Potorous tridactylus
JW Hudson and TJ Dawson
Australian Journal of Zoology
23(4) 453 - 461
Published: 1975
Abstract
Among the marsupials the thermoregulatory response of sweating is uncommon and has only been described in the larger macropodids. Sweating in kangaroos is very unusual in that it only occurs in response to an exercise heat load. The thermoregulatory responses of a smaller, more generalized rat-kangaroo Potorous tridactylus were therefore examined to obtain a more general appreciation of sweating in macropodids. The pattern of heat balance at low and neutral temperatures was characteristic of that previously found for macropodids; body temperature was 35.9 ± 0.52 (mean ± se). Standard metabolism was only slightly higher than the predicted level for marsupials and minimal conductance was low, c. 1.3 W m-2 per degree Celsius. At moderate air temperatures heat was primarily lost by vasodilation and panting. The thermoregulatory responses at high air temperatures (near or above body temperature) also included copious sweating from the tail, but not from the body generally. Sweating rates of 600-650 g water per m2 per hour were obtained; these are about twice the generally reported rates for eutherians such as cows and horses.https://doi.org/10.1071/ZO9750453
© CSIRO 1975