Dawson Russell D, Lawrie Cheyenne C, O'Brien Erin L
Ecosystem Science and Management, University of Northern British Columbia, 3333 University Way, Prince George, V2N 4Z9, BC, Canada.
Oecologia. 2005 Jul;144(3):499-507. doi: 10.1007/s00442-005-0075-7. Epub 2005 Sep 16.
Organisms are expected to balance energy allocation in such a way that fitness is maximized. While much research has focussed on allocation strategies of reproducing parents, in particular birds, relatively little attention has been paid to how nestlings allocate energy while in the nest. Nestling birds are faced with a trade-off between devoting energy to growth or to thermoregulation, and in altricial species it is likely that the thermal environment of the nest site influences the nature of this trade-off. Here, we experimentally investigate how altering the microclimate of nests affects the growth, size and survival, as well as cell-mediated immune (CMI) response, of nestling tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) in a temperate environment. We place air-activated heating pads in nests of swallows when young were between 4 days and 16 days of age, and compared performance of offspring to control nests. Our manipulation raised temperatures of heated nests by approximately 5 degrees C compared to control nests. Offspring in heated nests had enhanced survival while in the nest, and we also found that they were heavier and had longer ninth primary feathers at 16 days of age. In addition, heating nest boxes resulted in significantly faster growth of primaries, and there was a trend for growth rates of mass to also be higher in heated nests. There were no significant differences between heated and control nests in growth rate or size of tarsus at age 16 days, and we speculate that this lack of response to elevated nest temperatures may be due to growth of skeletal structures being limited by other factors such as calcium availability. We also found no difference between heated and control nests in CMI response. Nonetheless, our results show overall that increasing temperatures of nests has significant benefits that enhance the fitness of offspring. As provisioning rates to offspring did not differ between heated and control nests, we suspect that the beneficial effects of heating were not the consequence of changes in parental behaviour. Our results provide insight into factors, other than food supply, that have important consequences in determining reproductive success of birds breeding in temperate environments.
生物体预计会以一种使适应性最大化的方式来平衡能量分配。虽然许多研究聚焦于繁殖亲代,尤其是鸟类的能量分配策略,但相对较少关注雏鸟在巢内时如何分配能量。雏鸟面临着将能量用于生长还是体温调节的权衡,对于晚成雏物种来说,巢址的热环境很可能会影响这种权衡的性质。在这里,我们通过实验研究在温带环境中改变鸟巢的小气候如何影响树燕(双色树燕)雏鸟的生长、体型和存活以及细胞介导免疫(CMI)反应。当雏鸟4日龄至16日龄时,我们在燕子巢中放置空气激活加热垫,并将后代的表现与对照巢进行比较。与对照巢相比,我们的操作使加热巢的温度升高了约5摄氏度。加热巢中的雏鸟在巢内时存活率提高,我们还发现它们在16日龄时更重且第九根初级飞羽更长。此外,加热巢箱导致初级飞羽生长显著加快,并且加热巢中体重的增长率也有更高的趋势。16日龄时,加热巢和对照巢在跗跖的生长速率或大小上没有显著差异,我们推测对巢温升高缺乏反应可能是由于骨骼结构的生长受到其他因素(如钙的可利用性)的限制。我们还发现加热巢和对照巢在CMI反应上没有差异。尽管如此,我们的结果总体表明,提高巢温有显著益处,可增强后代的适应性。由于加热巢和对照巢对后代的喂食率没有差异,我们怀疑加热的有益效果不是亲代行为变化的结果。我们的结果揭示了除食物供应外,在决定温带环境中繁殖鸟类繁殖成功率方面具有重要影响的因素。