Living in extreme conditions
Living conditions at the Polar Regions are extreme, especially for herbivorous mammals and birds. Maintaining their high internal body temperature is an energetic challenge during the long winters with cold temperatures and storms. There is hardly any food, and the few plant remains left over from summer are hidden under snow and ice. Herbivores are therefore dependent on their fat reserves in winter. In order to grow them sufficiently, the animals must eat as much as possible in the short time that forage plants are growing. During the short Arctic summer, they cannot afford to take rest periods, as would be dictated by their circadian rhythm. The Spitsbergen reindeer also seemed to be lacking such daily rhythms. Scientists had so far assumed that natural selection shut down the inner circadian rhythms in the steady light of summer in order to guarantee 24-hour food intake.
The inner clock keeps ticking regularly
Together with Norwegian and British colleagues, Walter Arnold and Thomas Ruf of the Research Institute of Wildlife Ecology (FIWI) of the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna equipped free-living reindeer in the Arctic archipelago of Spitsbergen with a telemetry system developed at FIWI. Unlike previous studies, this system did not just record the animals´ overall movement activity, it also recorded their feeding activity, body temperature and heart rate as a measure of the animals‘ energy expenditure. Thomas Ruf established a particularly selective statistical method for biological applications such as this one, which was able to analyze whether these measured values change according to a daily rhythm.
The results were surprising: all measurement series showed a clear daily rhythmical organization. The intensity of this rhythm decreased considerably in the summer, not because of the steady light of the midnight sun, but because of the availability of freshly growing plant food. To eat as much as possible the animals evidently largely ignore their inner clock. Even in winter, when the reindeer lower their metabolic activity to less than half the summer level – a record among wild ungulates – they had a weakened circadian rhythm. In addition, during the polar night, the cycle length slightly deviated from 24 hours, with some differences between individuals and depending on the measurement parameters. The fact that inner rhythms “run free” in permanent darkness due to the lack of an external light rhythm stimulus was in itself the ultimate proof that the inner clock of the day never stops ticking, even in Spitsbergen reindeer.
About the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna
The University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna in Austria is one of the leading academic and research institutions in the field of Veterinary Sciences in Europe. About 1,300 employees and 2,300 students work on the campus in the north of Vienna which also houses five university clinics and various research sites. Outside of Vienna the university operates Teaching and Research Farms. The Vetmeduni Vienna plays in the global top league: in 2018, it occupies the excellent place 6 in the world-wide Shanghai University veterinary in the subject „Veterinary Science“.
Released by:
Georg Mair
Science Communication / Corporate Communications
University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna (Vetmeduni Vienna)
T +43 1 25077-1165
contact for scientific information:
Walter Arnold
Research Institute of Wildlife Ecology
University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna (Vetmeduni Vienna)
T +43 1 25077-7100
original publication:
The article „Circadian rhythmicity persists through the polar night and midnight sun in Svalbard reindeer“ by Walter Arnold, Thomas Ruf, Leif Egil Loe, R. Justin Irvine, Erik Ropstad, Vebjørn Veiberg, and Steve D. Albon was published in Scientific Reports.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-32778-4