Chewing Reindeer Can Sleep Simultaneously

Chewing Reindeer Can Sleep Simultaneously



In this busy ​holiday season, many of us multitask. Arctic reindeer are no exception.
Arctic reindeer are quite busy ‌in the summer —‌ eating when​ the​ sun shines around the clock and the food is abundant. Like⁣ other ruminants, reindeer spend a considerable⁢ amount of time chewing on regurgitated food, making it smaller and easier to digest. Finding time to sleep amid all this cud chewing might be tough. But not if the reindeer could sleep while they​ chewed.

To find out if the reindeer ‍could actually sleep-eat, neuroscientist Melanie Furrer and chronobiologist Sara Meier, along ⁢with their colleagues, trained four female Eurasian ​tundra reindeer (Rangifer tarandus tarandus) ‌to tolerate a pen and electrodes on shaved patches⁣ of skin. The process involved some‌ kicks and lots of lichen treats, “which is like candy to them,” says Meier, of the University⁢ of⁤ Zurich.​
The researchers were looking for the brain waves that appear during non-REM sleep, a deep, restorative sleep phase. These waves appeared when the reindeer were chewing cud, though the chewing motion itself made it hard to say whether the signal was identical to that of a regular sleep session. ⁣“We couldn’t go into detail by looking‌ only at the brain waves, because we have this chewing in there that disturbs ​it a bit,” says Furrer, also of the University of Zurich.

Still, other signs also pointed to sleep while chewing. The reindeer were calm ⁣while chewing, often with their eyes closed. “They were in a very relaxed state that resembles the body position of non-REM sleep,” Furrer says. Ruminating reindeer were also harder to disturb; rustling from neighboring ‌reindeer was less likely to get a look from a ruminating reindeer. When reindeer are kept awake, they need catch-up recovery sleep. But time spent chewing decreased​ this time spent in recovery ⁣sleep, the researchers found.

2023-12-22 11:00:00
Link from ‍ www.sciencenews.org

Exit mobile version