Bech Claus, Chappell Mark A, Astheimer Lee B, Londoño Gustavo A, Buttemer William A
Department of Biological Sciences, Australian Flora and Fauna Research Centre, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW, 2522, Australia.
Department of Biology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 7491, Trondheim, Norway.
J Comp Physiol B. 2016 May;186(4):503-12. doi: 10.1007/s00360-016-0964-6. Epub 2016 Feb 13.
Life history theory suggests that species experiencing high extrinsic mortality rates allocate more resources toward reproduction relative to self-maintenance and reach maturity earlier ('fast pace of life') than those having greater life expectancy and reproducing at a lower rate ('slow pace of life'). Among birds, many studies have shown that tropical species have a slower pace of life than temperate-breeding species. The pace of life has been hypothesized to affect metabolism and, as predicted, tropical birds have lower basal metabolic rates (BMR) than temperate-breeding birds. However, many temperate-breeding Australian passerines belong to lineages that evolved in Australia and share 'slow' life-history traits that are typical of tropical birds. We obtained BMR from 30 of these 'old-endemics' and ten sympatric species of more recently arrived passerine lineages (derived from Afro-Asian origins or introduced by Europeans) with 'faster' life histories. The BMR of 'slow' temperate-breeding old-endemics was indistinguishable from that of new-arrivals and was not lower than the BMR of 'fast' temperate-breeding non-Australian passerines. Old-endemics had substantially smaller clutches and longer maximal life spans in the wild than new arrivals, but neither clutch size nor maximum life span was correlated with BMR. Our results suggest that low BMR in tropical birds is not functionally linked to their 'slow pace of life' and instead may be a consequence of differences in annual thermal conditions experienced by tropical versus temperate species.
生活史理论表明,相对于自我维持,经历高外在死亡率的物种会将更多资源用于繁殖,并且比那些预期寿命更长、繁殖率更低(“慢生活节奏”)的物种更早达到成熟(“快生活节奏”)。在鸟类中,许多研究表明热带物种的生活节奏比温带繁殖物种更慢。据推测,生活节奏会影响新陈代谢,正如所预测的那样,热带鸟类的基础代谢率(BMR)低于温带繁殖鸟类。然而,许多温带繁殖的澳大利亚雀形目鸟类属于在澳大利亚进化的谱系,它们具有热带鸟类典型的“慢”生活史特征。我们从30种这类“古老特有种”以及10种具有“更快”生活史的同域分布的雀形目谱系(源自亚非地区或由欧洲人引入)的物种中获取了基础代谢率。温带繁殖的“慢”古老特有种的基础代谢率与新迁入物种的基础代谢率没有区别,且不低于温带繁殖的“快”非澳大利亚雀形目鸟类的基础代谢率。古老特有种在野外的窝卵数显著少于新迁入物种,最大寿命也更长,但窝卵数和最大寿命均与基础代谢率无关。我们的研究结果表明,热带鸟类的低基础代谢率与其“慢生活节奏”没有功能上的联系,相反,这可能是热带物种与温带物种所经历的年度热条件差异的结果。