Altshuler Douglas L, Dudley Robert
Section of Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2003 Sep;206(Pt 18):3139-47. doi: 10.1242/jeb.00540.
Hovering flight is one of the most energetically demanding forms of animal locomotion. Despite the cost, hummingbirds regularly hover at high elevations, where flight is doubly challenging because of reduced air density and oxygen availability. We performed three laboratory experiments to examine how air density and oxygen partial pressure influence wingbeat kinematics. In the first study, we experimentally lowered air density but maintained constant oxygen partial pressure. Under these hypodense but normoxic conditions, hummingbirds increased stroke amplitude substantially and increased wingbeat frequency slightly. In the second experiment, we maintained constant air density but decreased oxygen partial pressure. Under these normodense but hypoxic conditions, hummingbirds did not alter stroke amplitude but instead reduced wingbeat frequency until they could no longer generate enough vertical force to offset body weight. In a final combined experiment, we decreased air density but increased oxygen availability, and found that the wingbeat kinematics were unaffected by supplemental oxygen. We also studied hovering and maximally loaded flight performance for 43 hummingbird species distributed along a natural elevational gradient in Peru. During free hovering flight, hummingbirds showed increased stroke amplitude interspecifically at higher elevations, mirroring the intra-individual responses in our first laboratory experiment. During loaded flight, hummingbirds increased both wingbeat frequency and wing stroke amplitude by 19% relative to free-flight values at any given elevation. We conclude that modulation of wing stroke amplitude is a major compensatory mechanism for flight in hypodense or hypobaric environments. By contrast, increases in wingbeat frequency impose substantial metabolic demands, are only elicited transiently and anaerobically, and cannot be used to generate additional sustained lift at high elevations.
悬停飞行是动物运动中能量需求最大的形式之一。尽管成本高昂,但蜂鸟经常在高海拔地区悬停,在那里飞行面临双重挑战,因为空气密度降低和氧气供应减少。我们进行了三项实验室实验,以研究空气密度和氧分压如何影响翅膀运动学。在第一项研究中,我们通过实验降低了空气密度,但保持氧分压恒定。在这些低密度但常氧的条件下,蜂鸟大幅增加了冲程幅度,并略微提高了翅膀拍动频率。在第二项实验中,我们保持空气密度恒定,但降低了氧分压。在这些常密度但低氧的条件下,蜂鸟没有改变冲程幅度,而是降低了翅膀拍动频率,直到它们无法再产生足够的垂直力来抵消体重。在最后一项综合实验中,我们降低了空气密度,但增加了氧气供应,发现翅膀运动学不受补充氧气的影响。我们还研究了分布在秘鲁自然海拔梯度上的43种蜂鸟的悬停和最大负载飞行性能。在自由悬停飞行期间,蜂鸟在较高海拔地区种间冲程幅度增加,这与我们第一项实验室实验中的个体内反应相似。在负载飞行期间,相对于任何给定海拔的自由飞行值,蜂鸟的翅膀拍动频率和翅膀冲程幅度均增加了19%。我们得出结论,冲程幅度的调节是在低密度或低气压环境中飞行的主要补偿机制。相比之下,翅膀拍动频率的增加会带来巨大的代谢需求,只是暂时和无氧地引发,并且不能用于在高海拔地区产生额外的持续升力。