With the wind howling and the slush puddles getting deeper, it can seem like there’s no reason at all to get out of bed.
For some species, though, sleeping late—really late—is key to their survival. Animals including bears, bats, snakes, and even frogs all shut down for months every year, passing unfriendly seasons in a state called hibernation.
Hibernation is actually a much deeper “sleep” than the eight hours Homo sapiens are supposed to get each night. Hibernating animals are doing more than just snoozing—they’re conserving energy when environmental conditions are at their harshest.
Every animal that hibernates does so a little differently. But there are a few factors that are common across all hibernators.
The first is that during hibernation, breathing slows to a crawl. So does heart rate, which can drop to just a beat or two a minute. Body temperature also falls in hibernating animals, many of which are only about half as hot at rest as when they’re active. And finally, the metabolic rate—how fast the body burns energy—plummets, allowing animals to conserve calories while they’re not taking in nutrients.
Beyond these basics, though, different species have numerous ways to make hibernation work for them, from huddling together for warmth to surviving frozen in a block of ice.
In the next few weeks, we’ll introduce the hibernation habits of animals from all over the tree of life, and talk with the scientists who study them about why sleeping in works so well for so many species.