4.5 Article

A heterothermic spectrum in hummingbirds

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 225, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.243208

Keywords

Body temperature; Torpor; Metabolism; Hypothermia; Avian; Mammals

Categories

Funding

  1. NASA [NNX11AO28G]
  2. Tinker Foundation
  3. National Geographic Society [9506-14]
  4. American Philosophical Society
  5. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [787638]
  6. Swiss Federal Research Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research
  7. George Fox University Richter Scholar grant
  8. George Fox University Faculty Development Grant [GFU2014G02]
  9. Swiss National Science Foundation (Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Forderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung) [SNF -173342]
  10. NASA [NNX11AO28G, 140032] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Many endotherms use torpor to save energy, but deep torpor in mammals may have potential costs. Deep torpor also occurs in birds, but the trade-offs are unknown. This study found that some hummingbird species are capable of both deep and shallow torpor, indicating a fine-scale regulation of avian torpid metabolism.
Many endotherms use torpor, saving energy by a controlled reduction of their body temperature and metabolic rate. Some species (e.g. arctic ground squirrels, hummingbirds) enter deep torpor, dropping their body temperature by 23-37 degrees C, while others can only enter shallow torpor (e.g. pigeons, 3-10 degrees C reduction). However, deep torpor in mammals can increase predation risk (unless animals are in burrows or caves), inhibit immune function and result in sleep deprivation, so even for species that can enter deep torpor, facultative shallow torpor might help balance energy savings with these potential costs. Deep torpor occurs in three avian orders, but the trade-offs of deep torpor in birds are unknown. Although the literature hints that some bird species (mousebirds and perhaps hummingbirds) can use both shallow and deep torpor, little empirical evidence of such an avian heterothermy spectrum within species exists. We infrared imaged three hummingbird species that are known to use deep torpor, under natural temperature and light cycles, to test whether they were also capable of shallow torpor. All three species used both deep and shallow torpor, often on the same night. Depending on the species, they used shallow torpor for 5-35% of the night. The presence of a heterothermic spectrum in these bird species indicates a capacity for fine-scale physiological and genetic regulation of avian torpid metabolism.

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