The involvement of two organs, i.e. the liver and the brown adipose tissue (BAT) in response to cold in a hibernating species such as the garden dormouse has been studied. 2. In animals living in the cold, mitochondrial respiratory rates significantly increased (with respect to those living at 28 degrees C) in both organs with a larger increase in the BAT (+152% in the BAT and 67% in the liver). 3. The increase in BAT activity was obtained by a concomitant increase in: (a) the BAT mass (+30%), (b) the total mitochondrial mass (+20%), and (c) the mitochondrial respiratory rate (+64%). In the liver the increase was due only to an augmentation in mitochondrial mass and activity. 4. These results indicate that: (a) the BAT exerts a pre-eminent role in the physiological response to cold of garden dormouse, (b) a certain non-shivering thermogenesis (NST) is present in the liver of such species. In addition we suggest that a local thermoregulatory response would take place in a metabolically important organ such as the liver.