van de Ven T M F N, McKechnie A E, Cunningham S J
FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology, DST-NRF Centre of Excellence, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701, South Africa.
DST-NRF Centre of Excellence at the FitzPatrick Institute, Department of Zoology and Entomology, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, 0002, South Africa.
Oecologia. 2019 Sep;191(1):205-215. doi: 10.1007/s00442-019-04486-x. Epub 2019 Aug 16.
Avian responses to high environmental temperatures include retreating to cooler microsites and/or increasing rates of evaporative heat dissipation via panting, both of which may affect foraging success. We hypothesized that behavioural trade-offs constrain the maintenance of avian body condition in hot environments, and tested predictions arising from this hypothesis for male Southern Yellow-billed Hornbills (Tockus leucomelas) breeding in the Kalahari Desert. Operative temperatures experienced by the hornbills varied by up to 13 °C among four microsite categories used by foraging males. Lower prey capture rates while panting and reductions associated with the occupancy of off-ground microsites, resulted in sharp declines in foraging efficiency during hot weather. Consequently, male body mass (M) gain between sunrise and sunset decreased with increasing daily maximum air temperature (T), from ~ 5% when T < 25 °C to zero when T = 38.4 °C. Overnight M loss averaged ~ 4.5% irrespective of T, creating a situation where nett 24-h M loss approached 5% on extremely hot days. These findings support the notion that temperature is a major determinant of body condition for arid-zone birds. Moreover, the strong temperature dependence of foraging success and body condition among male hornbills provisioning nests raises the possibility that male behavioural trade-offs translate into equally strong effects of hot weather on female condition and nest success. Our results also reveal how rapid anthropogenic climate change is likely to substantially decrease the probability of arid-zone birds like hornbills being able to successfully provision nests while maintaining their own condition.
鸟类对高温环境的反应包括退到较凉爽的微生境和/或通过喘气增加蒸发散热速率,这两者都可能影响觅食成功率。我们假设行为权衡限制了炎热环境中鸟类身体状况的维持,并对卡拉哈里沙漠中繁殖的雄性南非黄嘴犀鸟(Tockus leucomelas)这一假设产生的预测进行了测试。觅食的雄性犀鸟在使用的四类微生境中所经历的有效温度变化高达13摄氏度。喘气时较低的猎物捕获率以及与离地微生境占据相关的减少,导致炎热天气下觅食效率急剧下降。因此,日出到日落期间雄性体重(M)的增加随着每日最高气温(T)的升高而降低,当T < 25摄氏度时约为5%,当T = 38.4摄氏度时降至零。无论气温如何,夜间体重平均损失约4.5%,在极热天气下会出现24小时净体重损失接近5%的情况。这些发现支持了温度是干旱区鸟类身体状况主要决定因素的观点。此外,在为巢穴提供食物的雄性犀鸟中,觅食成功率和身体状况对温度的强烈依赖性增加了一种可能性,即雄性的行为权衡会对炎热天气下雌性的状况和巢穴成功率产生同样强烈的影响。我们的研究结果还揭示了快速的人为气候变化可能如何大幅降低像犀鸟这样的干旱区鸟类在维持自身状况的同时成功为巢穴提供食物的概率。