1. You are running a hydrogen carrier. Huge source of protons.
2. Catalytic activity increases with temp.
3. You can get oxidative exchange of deuterium. Try getting recovery of Toluene-d8 out of chlorinated solutions!
Sounds like you fixed your problem.
When doing semivolatile analysis once I encountered a problem where I lost a surrogate that had 12 deuterium on it, found out that was caused by the sample being too acidic. The spectra of the peak was rather neat as you could see masses present for the loss of each deuterium, but so many masses is terrible for sensitivity when looking at only one.
Temperature seems to be the deciding factor of whether or not the loss of deuterium happens at all, but it was funny how the presence of benzene seemed to accelerate the loss. What was also strange was that the benzene response still appeared linear, it didn't seem that the benzene-d6 converted completely to benzene. I imagine I didn't see where it went because was not looking for the intermediate analogs (-d5 -d4 ect).