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Study shows how camels keep their cool

Study shows how camels keep their cool

(麻豆淫院Org.com) -- UQ research has found when it comes to camels, staying cool may be the key to reproductive success.

Emeritus Professor Gordon Grigg, from UQ's School of Biological Sciences, and a team of colleagues working in Central Australia, have found male camels have the ability to drop their body temperature which may help them last longer in rutting displays.

鈥淩utting involves very energetic daily display 鈥渇ighting鈥 during which bulls contest ownership of a herd of females,鈥 Professor Grigg said.

鈥淏y starting each day cooler, a bull can postpone heat stress, compete for longer, win more contests and potentially sire more offspring.鈥

He said the ability of camels to drop body temperature in the mornings, invoking hypothermia, was once thought to be only a mechanism for conserving water in very hot dry conditions.

鈥淏ut what we saw cannot be for saving water, we saw it only in winter, only in bulls during rut and, anyway, they had water freely available and used it routinely,鈥 he said.

鈥淪o we speculate that by lowering their minimum temperature each morning during rut, bulls increase their chance of winning a harem.

鈥淏y starting the day cool, a bull will enhance his capacity to store heat generated by the strenuous activity, thus prolonging the onset of heat stress.

鈥淎 bull that can sustain a contest for longer is more likely to win it and, so, control a herd of females and get more matings.

鈥淭hat is, the daily hypothermias we observed could have a direct bearing on . 鈥

Professor Grigg said the rutting habits of male camels were fascinating as competing bulls perform elaborate, ritualized and intense competitive behaviour including posing and strutting side by side, inflating and exposing the dulaa (a sac-like extension of the palate), jostling, exhibiting flehmen (curling the upper lip to enhance chemoreception), running together and, not always but often, actually fighting.

The study by Professor Grigg and his team J眉rgen Heuke and Birgit D枚rges ( behaviourists & ecologists, University of Braunschweig), Jocelyn Coventry (veterinarian, Alice Springs), Alex Coppock (cattleman, Newhaven) and, from the School of Biological Sciences, Lyn Beard (Scientific Officer) and Simon Blomberg (statistical assistance), has been published online in scientific journal Biology Letters (doi:10.1098).

Provided by University of Queensland ( : )

Citation: Study shows how camels keep their cool (2009, July 15) retrieved 15 July 2025 from /news/2009-07-camels-cool.html
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