Department of Biology and Marine Biology, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, NC 28403-5915, USA.
Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, National Zoological Park, Washington, D.C. 20008, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2023 Feb 1;226(3). doi: 10.1242/jeb.245316. Epub 2023 Feb 10.
We used thermal imaging to show that two environmental factors - acute stress and diet - influence thermoregulatory performance of a known thermal window, the avian bill. The bill plays important roles in thermoregulation and water balance. Given that heat loss through the bill is adjustable through vasoconstriction and vasodilation, and acute stress can cause vasoconstriction in peripheral body surfaces, we hypothesized that stress may influence the bill's role as a thermal window. We further hypothesized that diet influences heat dissipation from the bill, given that body condition influences the surface temperature of another body region (the eye region). We measured the surface temperature of the bills of song sparrows (Melospiza melodia) before, during and after handling by an observer at 37°C ambient temperature. We fed five birds a restricted diet intended to maintain body mass typical of wild birds, and we fed six birds an unrestricted diet for 5 months prior to experiments. Acute stress caused a decrease in the surface temperature of the bill, resulting in a 32.4% decrease in heat dissipation immediately following acute stress, before recovering over approximately 2.3 min. The initial reduction and subsequent recovery provide partial support for the hemoprotective and thermoprotective hypotheses, which predict a reduction or increase in peripheral blood flow, respectively. Birds with unrestricted diets had larger bills and dissipated more heat, indicating that diet and body condition influence bill-mediated heat dissipation and thermoregulation. These results indicate that stress-induced vascular changes and diet can influence mechanisms of heat loss and potentially inhibit optimal thermoregulation.
我们利用热成像技术表明,两个环境因素——急性应激和饮食——影响着已知的热窗,即鸟类喙的体温调节性能。喙在体温调节和水盐平衡中起着重要作用。由于通过血管收缩和血管舒张可以调节通过喙的热量损失,而急性应激会导致外周体表血管收缩,我们假设应激可能会影响喙作为热窗的作用。我们进一步假设饮食会影响从喙散热,因为身体状况会影响另一个身体区域(眼部区域)的表面温度。我们在环境温度为 37°C 的情况下,测量了在观察者处理前后歌雀(Melospiza melodia)喙的表面温度。我们给五只鸟喂食限制饮食,以维持与野生鸟类相似的体重,在进行实验前,给六只鸟喂食不限量的饮食 5 个月。急性应激导致喙表面温度下降,导致应激后立即散热减少 32.4%,然后在大约 2.3 分钟内恢复。最初的减少和随后的恢复为血液保护和体温保护假说提供了部分支持,这两个假说分别预测外周血流量的减少或增加。饮食不受限制的鸟类喙更大,散热更多,这表明饮食和身体状况会影响通过喙介导的散热和体温调节。这些结果表明,应激诱导的血管变化和饮食可以影响热量损失机制,并可能抑制最佳体温调节。