McKechnie Andrew E, Gerson Alexander R, Wolf Blair O
South African Research Chair in Conservation Physiology, South African National Biodiversity Institute, P.O. Box 754, Pretoria 0001, South Africa
DSI-NRF Centre of Excellence at the FitzPatrick Institute, Department of Zoology and Entomology, University of Pretoria, Hatfield, Private Bag X20, Pretoria 0028, South Africa.
J Exp Biol. 2021 Feb 24;224(Pt Suppl 1):jeb229211. doi: 10.1242/jeb.229211.
Evaporative heat dissipation is a key aspect of avian thermoregulation in hot environments. We quantified variation in avian thermoregulatory performance at high air temperatures () using published data on body temperature (), evaporative water loss (EWL) and resting metabolic rate (RMR) measured under standardized conditions of very low humidity in 56 arid-zone species. Maximum during acute heat exposure varied from 42.5±1.3°C in caprimulgids to 44.5±0.5°C in passerines. Among passerines, both maximum and the difference between maximum and normothermic decreased significantly with body mass (). Scaling exponents for minimum thermoneutral EWL and maximum EWL were 0.825 and 0.801, respectively, even though evaporative scope (ratio of maximum to minimum EWL) varied widely among species. Upper critical limits of thermoneutrality () varied by >20°C and maximum RMR during acute heat exposure scaled to in both the overall data set and among passerines. The slope of RMR at > increased significantly with but was substantially higher among passerines, which rely on panting, compared with columbids, in which cutaneous evaporation predominates. Our analysis supports recent arguments that interspecific within-taxon variation in heat tolerance is functionally linked to evaporative scope and maximum ratios of evaporative heat loss (EHL) to metabolic heat production (MHP). We provide predictive equations for most variables related to avian heat tolerance. Metabolic costs of heat dissipation pathways, rather than capacity to increase EWL above baseline levels, appear to represent the major constraint on the upper limits of avian heat tolerance.
在炎热环境中,蒸发散热是鸟类体温调节的一个关键方面。我们利用已发表的关于56种干旱地区物种在极低湿度标准条件下测量的体温()、蒸发失水(EWL)和静息代谢率(RMR)的数据,量化了高温()下鸟类体温调节性能的变化。急性热暴露期间的最高体温在夜鹰科中为42.5±1.3°C,在雀形目中为44.5±0.5°C。在雀形目鸟类中,最高体温以及最高体温与正常体温之间的差值均随体重()显著下降。最低热中性EWL和最高EWL的标度指数分别为0.825和0.801,尽管不同物种间蒸发范围(最高EWL与最低EWL之比)差异很大。热中性的上限()变化超过20°C,急性热暴露期间的最高RMR在整个数据集中以及雀形目鸟类中均与体重呈比例关系。高于时RMR的斜率随体重显著增加,但与以皮肤蒸发为主的 Columbidae 相比,依赖喘息的雀形目鸟类的斜率要高得多。我们的分析支持了最近的观点,即分类单元内种间耐热性差异在功能上与蒸发范围以及蒸发散热(EHL)与代谢产热(MHP)的最大比率相关。我们提供了与鸟类耐热性相关的大多数变量的预测方程。散热途径的代谢成本,而非将EWL提高到基线水平以上的能力,似乎是鸟类耐热上限的主要限制因素。