Why do animals hibernate in winter?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Food is scarce, save energy
Too cold to move around — Wrong. Many animals are active in cold weather. Hibernation is about food availability, not temperature alone.
Food is scarce, save energy ✓ — Correct! Hibernation lets animals survive when food is scarce. They drastically slow metabolism—some heartbeats drop from 200 to 5 per minute! Body fat provides energy until spring brings food again.
Hiding from winter predators — Wrong. Hibernating animals are actually more vulnerable to predators, not safer. They hibernate to conserve energy when food is scarce, not to hide from predators.
More Animal Behavior questions
- A platypus lays eggs but feeds hatchlings milk without nipples. What makes that less contradictory?
- Male platypuses have venomous ankle spurs. Why are they probably not mainly prey-hunting tools?
- Platypuses have ~40,000 electroreceptors, but short-beaked echidnas have ~400. What best explains the drop?
- Why does a hunting platypus sweep its bill side to side instead of just pointing it forward?
- What can a platypus bill read from a shrimp's muscles rather than from water motion?
- When should you worry if a cat suddenly gets very clingy?
