4.6 Article

A songbird adjusts its heart rate and body temperature in response to season and fluctuating daily conditions

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2020.0213

Keywords

bio-logging; heart rate; body temperature; wintering; songbird

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Funding

  1. Max-Planck Society
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [EXC 2117 -4220]

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The study found that Eurasian blackbirds decrease their body temperature at night in response to decreasing ambient temperature, but not during the daytime. However, they increase their heart rate when ambient temperatures become colder in all seasons, with the temperature setpoint at which heart rate is increased differing between seasons and day/night.
In a seasonal world, organisms are continuously adjusting physiological processes relative to local environmental conditions. Owing to their limited heat and fat storage capacities, small animals, such as songbirds, must rapidly modulate their metabolism in response to weather extremes and changing seasons to ensure survival. As a consequence of previous technical limitations, most of our existing knowledge about how animals respond to changing environmental conditions comes from laboratory studies or field studies over short temporal scales. Here, we expanded beyond previous studies by outfitting 71 free-ranging Eurasian blackbirds (Turdus merula) with novel heart rate and body temperature loggers coupled with radio transmitters, and followed individuals in the wild from autumn to spring. Across seasons, blackbirds thermoconformed at night, i.e. their body temperature decreased with decreasing ambient temperature, but not so during daytime. By contrast, during all seasons blackbirds increased their heart rate when ambient temperatures became colder. However, the temperature setpoint at which heart rate was increased differed between seasons and between day and night. In our study, blackbirds showed an overall seasonal reduction in mean heart rate of 108 beats min(-1) (21%) as well as a 1.2 degrees C decrease in nighttime body temperature. Episodes of hypometabolism during cold periods likely allow the birds to save energy and, thus, help offset the increased energetic costs during the winter when also confronted with lower resource availability. Our data highlight that, similar to larger non-hibernating mammals and birds, small passerine birds such as Eurasian blackbirds not only adjust their heart rate and body temperature on daily timescales, but also exhibit pronounced seasonal changes in both that are modulated by local environmental conditions such as temperature. This article is part of the theme issue 'Measuring physiology in free-living animals (Part I)'.

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