The mention of a koala bear often conjures up an image of an
adorable spoon-nosed creature cocking its head to one side while
clinging to a tree.
Now, scientists have figured out why the iconic Australian marsupials hug trees: The trunks help the koala bears keep cool, according to a new study.
"It
can be a really useful way of getting rid of heat on a hot day," said
study co-author Michael Kearney, an ecologist at the University of
Melbourne in Australia.
Tree huggers
Given that koalas
spend so much time in trees — the marsupials live in Australia's
woodlands where they munch on leaves and sleep — nobody wondered why
they hugged the trunks. People just thought they were taking a break on a
more stable spot after eating leaves in the branches, Kearney said.
As
such, the discovery came as a surprise. Kearney and his student,
doctoral candidate Natalie Briscoe, were trying to predict how the
woodland creatures on French Island, near Melbourne, would regulate
their body temperatures as the continent heats up due to climate change.
The region is cool most of the year, but during the summer, the
temperature routinely spikes above 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees
Celsius), Kearney said.
Briscoe measured wind and shade levels using a portable weather
station, but didn't find any striking trends. Then she pointed to an
infrared thermometer, which measures temperature based on thermal
radiation, at the tree trunks the koalas were hugging. The trunks were
considerably cooler than the ambient air temperature — sometimes by as
much as 9 degrees F (5 degrees C), Kearney said.
She also noticed the koalas clinging to acacia trees, even though they normally eat eucalyptus leaves.
"As
it got hotter the koalas went farther down the trees and started to
really hug onto the tree trunks," Kearney told Live Science. "That
seemed strange to us until we figured out that the trees are a bit
cooler."
Stay cool
Koala bears pant to keep cool, letting evaporated moisture from their mouths carry heat away from their bodies.
When the team modeled koala bear heat transfer, they found the
tree-dwellers save half the water they would have used panting if they
hug trees instead.
Koalas get most of their water from their diet,
but because eucalyptus leaves are laced with a toxin, the koalas can
eat only a limited amount before the toxin harms the animals, Kearney
said.
So tree-hugging could be
critical to their survival on hot days, by allowing them to cool off
without wasting precious water through panting, Kearney said.
It's
not clear exactly why their preferred tree trunks are cool, but one
possibility is that they pull in a lot of groundwater, which stays
closer to the annual average air temperature, rather than the current
air temperature, he said.
Climate change planning
Koalas'
food (and hugging) trees will change their range with the hotter and
drier weather brought by climate change, Bill Ellis, a wildlife
researcher at the University of Queensland in Australia, who was not
involved in the study, wrote in an email to Live Science.
But the
new study suggests that food may be a smaller consideration in
preserving koala habitat than previously thought, he said.
"As
long as we plant trees koalas will eat, perhaps the other trees we
plant just need to provide the right mix of shelter and heat sink
characteristics," Ellis said. "It's quite an interesting concept, but
non-native trees might be the future for koalas — as long as they also
have the right fodder."
Farther north in the koala's range, the air is muggy and it feels hotter, so scientists should see how tree-hugging plays out in in different locations in the koala's habitat, Ellis said.
"Humidity
means that the power of evaporation for cooling is reduced," Kearney
said. So tree-hugging may be even more important up north, where
evaporative cooling doesn't work as well, he said.
The study was published today (June 3) in the journal Biology Letters. ( Associated Press )
This article originally appeared in : Why do koalas hug trees?
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