Everything about Dormancy totally explained
Dormancy is a period in an
organism's life cycle when growth, development, and (in animals) physical activity is temporarily suspended. This minimizes
metabolic activity and therefore helps an organism to conserve
energy. Dormancy tends to be closely associated with
environmental conditions. Organisms can synchronize entry to a dormant phase with their
environment through predictive or consequential means.
Predictive dormancy occurs when an organism enters a dormant phase
before the onset of adverse conditions. For example,
photoperiod and decreasing
temperature are used by many
plants to predict the onset of
winter.
Consequential dormancy occurs when organisms enter a dormant phase
after adverse conditions have arisen. This is commonly found in areas with an unpredictable climate. While very sudden changes in conditions may lead to a high
mortality rate among animals relying on consequential dormancy, its use can be advantageous, as organisms remain active longer, and are therefore able to make greater use of available resources.
The most famous type of dormancy is hibernation, although most people use the term wrongly. Most people believe that bears hibernate. Bears don't hibernate. In fact there are very few mammals that do. Bears simply sleep the winter away, and there's a difference between that and true hibernation.
To explain the difference take the example of a true hibernator, a chipmunk. When a chipmunk enters hibernation its breathing slows from about 95 breaths per minute to one breath every 2 or 3 minutes. A chipmunk's body temperature also lowers from around 99°F to around 39°F, and its heart rate also drops drastically. All this slowing down of the system greatly reduces the amount of energy necessary for a chipmunk to survive, and this allows a chipmunk to overwinter on nothing but built up fat stores.
Bears, on the other hand, simply sleep the winter away. Their system doesn't slow down much more than it does in normal sleep. Bears will get up during the winter and hunt for food on occasion. Most females, in fact, wake up at least once during the winter. That is when they give birth. As soon as the cubs are born, they immediately suckle the mother and then they all go back to sleep.
There is one other important difference between sleeping and true hibernation. True hibernators, such as the chipmunk, are very hard to arouse from their dormant states. Bears, on the other, hand are easily aroused. This is especially important to note if one is planing to crawl into any caves this winter since bears often wake up grumpy.
Animal dormancy
Hibernation
Hibernation is a mechanism used by many animals to escape cold weather and
food shortage over the
winter. Hibernation may be predictive or consequential. An animal prepares for hibernation by building up a thick layer of
body fat during late
summer and
autumn which will provide it with energy during the dormant period. During hibernation the animal undergoes many
physiological changes, including decreased
heart rate (by as much as 95%) and decreased
body temperature. Animals that hibernate include
bats,
ground squirrels and other rodents, mouse lemurs, the
European Hedgehog and other insectivores, monotremes and marsupials.
Diapause
Diapause is a predictive strategy that's predetermined by an animal's
genotype. Diapause is common in
insects, allowing them to suspend development between
autumn and
spring, and in
mammals such as the
red deer, where a delay in attachment of the
embryo to the
uterine lining ensures that
offspring are born in spring, when conditions are most favorable.
Estivation
Estivation is an example of consequential dormancy in response to very hot or dry conditions. It is common in
invertebrates such as the
garden snail and
worm but also occurs in other animals such as the
lungfish. The period of dormancy that bears experience during the winter is also called estivation.
Brumation
Brumation is an example of dormancy in
reptiles that's similar to
hibernation(External Link
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). It differs from hibernation in the metabolic processes involved
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).
Torpor
Torpor is a short-term reduction of body temperature to an ambient level during periods of inactivity, often lasting only a few hours. Animals that experience torpor include small
birds such as
hummingbirds and some small
mammals such as
bats.
Bacterial dormancy
Certain
bacteria produce metabolically inactive forms that can survive intensely adverse conditions unharmed; these are known as
cysts or
endospores. This is a consequential strategy. Inactivating these resistant forms is usually done using an
autoclave (pressurized heating device).
Viral dormancy
Viruses of the family
Herpesvirus are notable for remaining dormant within
cells in the human body. See for example
varicella zoster virus, which in an individual causes first
chickenpox then shingles (
herpes zoster). Concerning viruses this dormancy is often referred to as
latency or a
latent infection.
HIV produces a latent infection in lymphocytes, and at this stage in its life-cycle it's called a
provirus.
This shouldn't be confused with
clinical latency.
Plant dormancy
In
plant physiology, dormancy is a period of arrested plant growth. It is a survival strategy exhibited by many plant
species, which enables them to survive in
climates where part of the year is unsuitable for growth, such as
winter or
dry seasons.
Plant species that exhibit dormancy have a
biological clock that tells them to slow activity and to prepare
soft tissues for a period of freezing temperatures or water shortage. After a normal growing season, dormancy can be brought on by decreasing temperatures, shortened day length, or a reduction in
rainfall.
Dormant seeds
When a mature
seed is placed under favorable conditions and fails to
germinate, it's said to be dormant. There are two basic types of seed dormancy. The first is called
seed coat dormancy or
external dormancy, and is caused by the presence of a hard seed covering or
seed coat that prevents water and oxygen from reaching and activating the
embryo. The second type of seed dormancy is called
embryo dormancy or
internal dormancy, and is caused by a condition of the embryo which prevents
germination (Black M, Butler J, Hughes M. 1987). The oldest seed that has been germinated into a
viable plant was an approximately 1,300-yr-old
lotus fruit, recovered from a dry lakebed in northeastern
China.
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Tree dormancy
Tree species that have well-developed dormancy needs may be tricked to some degree, but not completely. For instance, if a
Japanese Maple (
Acer palmatum) is given an "eternal summer" through exposure to additional daylight, it'll grow continuously for as long as two years. Eventually, however, a temperate climate plant will automatically go dormant, no matter what environmental conditions it experiences.
Deciduous plants will lose their leaves;
evergreens will curtail all new growth. Going through an "eternal summer" and the resultant automatic dormancy is stressful to the plant and usually fatal. The fatality rate increases to 100% if the plant doesn't receive the necessary period of cold temperatures required to break the dormancy. Most plants will require a certain number of hours of "chilling" at temperatures between about 0 °C and 10 °C to be able to break dormancy (Bewley JD, Black M. (1994). )
Further Information
Get more info on 'Dormancy'.
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