Heterothermic animals are those that can switch between
poikilothermic and
homeothermic strategies. These changes in strategies typically occur on a daily basis or on an annual basis. More often than not, it is used as a way to dissociate the fluctuating
metabolic rates seen in some small mammals and birds (e.g.
bats and
hummingbirds), from those of traditional
cold blooded animals. In many
bat species, body temperature and metabolic rate are elevated only during activity. When at rest, these animals reduce their
metabolisms drastically, which results in their body temperature dropping to that of the surrounding environment. This makes them
homeothermic when active, and
poikilothermic when at rest. This phenomenon has been termed 'daily
torpor' and was intensively studied in the
Djungarian hamster. During the
hibernation season, this animal shows strongly reduced metabolism each day during the rest phase while it reverts to
endothermic metabolism during its active phase, leading to normal
euthermic body temperatures (around 38 °C). Larger mammals (e.g.
ground squirrels) and
bats show multi-day torpor bouts during hibernation (up to several weeks) in winter. During these multi-day torpor bouts, body temperature drops to ~1 °C above ambient temperature and metabolism may drop to about 1% of the normal endothermic metabolic rate. Even in these deep hibernators, the long periods of torpor is interrupted by bouts of endothermic metabolism, called arousals (typically lasting between 4–20 hours). These metabolic arousals cause body temperature to return to euthermic levels 35-37 °C.) or under special environmental circumstances. ==Regional heterothermy==