Avian thermoregulation in the heat: evaporative cooling capacity in an archetypal desert specialist, Burchell's sandgrouse (Pterocles burchelli)
Author(s) -
Andrew E. McKechnie,
Ben Smit,
Maxine C. Whitfield,
Matthew J. Noakes,
William A. Talbot,
Manuel Ramirez Garcia,
Alexander R. Gerson,
Blair O. Wolf
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of experimental biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.367
H-Index - 185
eISSN - 1477-9145
pISSN - 0022-0949
DOI - 10.1242/jeb.146563
Subject(s) - thermoregulation , desert (philosophy) , evaporative cooler , scaling , zoology , heat stress , ecology , biology , chemistry , atmospheric sciences , mathematics , geography , physics , meteorology , philosophy , geometry , epistemology
Sandgrouse (Pterocliformes) are quintessential examples of avian adaptation to desert environments, but relatively little is known about the limits to their heat tolerance and evaporative cooling capacity. We predicted that evaporative cooling in Burchell’s sandgrouse (Pterocles burchelli) is highly efficient and provides the basis for tolerance of very high air temperature (Ta). We measured body temperature (Tb), resting metabolic rate (RMR) and evaporative water loss (EWL) at Ta between 25°C and ∼58°C in birds exposed to successive increments in Ta. Normothermic Tb averaged 39.0°C, lower than typical avian values. At Ta>34.5°C, Tb increased linearly to a maximum of 43.6°C at Ta=56°C. The upper critical limit of thermoneutrality (Tuc) was Ta=43.8°C, closely coinciding with the onset of panting and gular flutter. Above the Tuc, RMR increased 2.5fold to 2.89 W at Ta=56°C, a fractional increase far exceeding that of many other species under comparable conditions. Rates of EWL increased rapidly at Ta>42.9°C to 7.84±0.90 g h −1 at Ta=56°C, an 11fold increase above minimal levels. Maximum evaporative cooling efficiency (ratio of evaporative heat loss to metabolic heat production) was 2.03, but could be as high as 2.70 if our assumption that the birds weremetabolising lipids is incorrect. Thermoregulation at very high Ta inP. burchelliwas characterised by large increases in RMR and EWL, and is much less efficient than in taxa such as columbids and
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