Department of Evolutionary and Environmental Biology and Institute of Evolution, University of Haifa 199 Aba Khoushy Avenue, Mount Carmel 3498838, Haifa, Israel.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2019 Apr;94(2):700-720. doi: 10.1111/brv.12474. Epub 2018 Oct 18.
Although feathers are the unifying characteristic of all birds, our understanding of the causes, mechanisms, patterns and consequences of the feather moult process lags behind that of other major avian life-history phenomena such as reproduction and long-distance migration. Migration, which evolved in many species of the temperate and arctic zones, requires high energy expenditure to endure long-distance journeys. About a third of Western-Palearctic passerines perform long-distance migrations of thousands of kilometres each year using various morphological, physiological, biomechanical, behavioural and life-history adaptations. The need to include the largely non-overlapping breeding, long-distance migration and feather moult processes within the annual cycle imposes a substantial constraint on the time over which the moult process can take place. Here, we review four feather-moult-related adaptations which, likely due to time constraints, evolved among long-distance Western-Palearctic migrants: (i) increased moult speed; (ii) increased overlap between moult and breeding or migration; (iii) decreased extent of plumage moult; and (iv) moult of part or all of the plumage during the over-wintering period in the tropics rather than in the breeding areas. We suggest that long-distance migration shaped the evolution of moult strategies and increased the diversity of these strategies among migratory passerines. In contrast to this variation, all resident passerines in the Western Palearctic moult immediately after breeding by renewing the entire plumage of adults and in some species also juveniles, while in other species juvenile moult is partial. We identify important gaps in our current understanding of the moult process that should be addressed in the future. Notably, previous studies suggested that the ancestral moult strategy is a post-breeding summer moult in the Western Palearctic breeding areas and that moult during the winter evolved due to the scheduling of long-distance migration immediately after breeding. We offer an alternative hypothesis based on the notion of southern ancestry, proposing that the ancestral moult strategy was a complete moult during the 'northern winter' in the Afro-tropical region in these species, for both adults and juveniles. An important aspect of the observed variation in moult strategies relates to their control mechanisms and we suggest that there is insufficient knowledge regarding the physiological mechanisms that are involved, and whether they are genetically fixed or shaped by environmental factors. Finally, research effort is needed on how global climate changes may influence avian annual routines by altering the scheduling of major processes such as long-distance migration and feather moult.
虽然羽毛是所有鸟类的共同特征,但我们对羽毛换羽过程的原因、机制、模式和后果的理解落后于其他主要的鸟类生命史现象,如繁殖和长途迁徙。迁徙在许多温带和北极地区的物种中进化,需要大量的能量消耗才能忍受长途旅行。大约三分之一的西半球雀形目鸟类每年使用各种形态、生理、生物力学、行为和生活史适应性进行长途迁徙数千公里。需要在年度周期内包括繁殖、长途迁徙和羽毛换羽等主要不重叠的过程,这对换羽过程可以进行的时间施加了实质性的限制。在这里,我们回顾了四个与羽毛换羽相关的适应,这些适应可能由于时间限制,在长途西半球迁徙者中进化:(i)加快换羽速度;(ii)在换羽和繁殖或迁徙之间增加重叠;(iii)减少羽毛换羽的程度;(iv)在热带地区的越冬期间而不是在繁殖地区进行部分或全部羽毛换羽。我们认为,长途迁徙塑造了换羽策略的进化,并增加了迁徙雀形目鸟类中这些策略的多样性。与这种变化相反,西半球所有留鸟在繁殖后立即通过更新成鸟和某些物种幼鸟的整个羽毛来换羽,而在其他物种中,幼鸟换羽是部分的。我们确定了当前对换羽过程理解中的重要空白,这些空白应在未来得到解决。值得注意的是,以前的研究表明,祖先的换羽策略是在西半球繁殖地区的繁殖后夏季换羽,而冬季换羽是由于繁殖后立即进行长途迁徙的时间安排而进化的。我们提出了一个基于南部祖先概念的替代假设,即对于这些物种,成年和幼鸟的祖先换羽策略是在它们的非洲热带地区的“北方冬季”期间进行完整的换羽。观察到的换羽策略变化的一个重要方面与它们的控制机制有关,我们认为对于涉及的生理机制知之甚少,并且它们是否是遗传固定的,或者是否受环境因素的影响。最后,需要研究全球气候变化如何通过改变长途迁徙和羽毛换羽等主要过程的时间安排来影响鸟类的年度活动。