This experiment examined the effects of intraperitoneal ephedrine (5-25 mg/kg) on operant thermoregulatory behavior of rats in the cold (-8°C), and of 10 mg/kg on metabolic rate at a thermoneutral (22°C) ambient temperature (Ta) and in the cold (5°C). Posttest colonic temperature (Tc) decreased dose-dependently in the behavioral tests, yet the demand for heat varied little with respect to saline except for a significant reduction at the lowest dose tested (i.e., there was no compensation for the reduced Tc induced by ephedrine). Ephedrine had a potent thermogenic effect at a Ta of 22°C, increasing both metabolic rate and Tc. In the cold, ephedrine reduced Tc, but this effect could not be accounted for by a reduction in metabolism, which was not significantly different from saline.