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VARIATION IN PHYSIOLOGY AND ENERGY MANAGEMENT OF WINTERING WHITE-WINGED SCOTERS IN RELATION TO LOCAL HABITAT CONDITIONS

机译:与当地人居环境相关的冬季白翅小摩托车的生理和能量管理变化

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Along the Pacific coast of North America, White-winged Scoters (Melanitta fusca) winter in sites that vary widely in habitat conditions. This habitat variation likely alters the relative costs and benefits of using specific sites in terms of factors such as foraging conditions, degree of predation danger, and thermoregulatory costs. To assess how White-winged Scoters adjust their physiology and energy management in response to variation in habitat conditions, we contrasted overwinter dynamics in several physiological indicators across five sites in British Columbia and Washington. We tested the relative support for various hypotheses that considered exposure to wind and waves, water depth, predation danger, diet composition, and collection period as possible underlying causes of variation in physiological indicators. Total body mass and lipid mass were highest at an exposed offshore site, which may reflect an adaptive response to buffer against unpredictable foraging conditions and increased thermoregulatory costs. At nearshore sites where exposure was lower, scoters maintained lower lipid masses throughout the winter. Total lipid mass declined through the winter in all sites, a result consistent with findings for many waterfowl species. However, levels of plasma metabolites (triglycerides, β-hydroxybutyrate) varied little by site, suggesting that, irrespective of body composition, birds at all sites maintained physiological homeostasis. Digestive morphology was strongly related to diet, with smaller gizzards and longer intestines associated with a greater fraction of soft-bodied foods in the diet. Our results suggest that the physiology and energy management of wintering White-winged Scoters is related to local habitat conditions.
机译:沿北美太平洋海岸,白翅苏格兰人(Melanitta fusca)冬季栖息地条件差异很大。这种栖息地的变化可能会根据觅食条件,捕食危险程度和温度调节成本等因素,改变使用特定地点的相对成本和收益。为了评估白翅苏格兰人如何根据生境条件的变化来调整其生理和能量管理,我们在不列颠哥伦比亚省和华盛顿州的五个地点对比了几种生理指标的越冬动态。我们测试了各种假设的相对支持,这些假设认为暴露于风浪,水深,捕食危险,饮食结构和采集时间是生理指标变化的可能潜在原因。在裸露的近海处,总体重和脂质质量最高,这可能反映了针对不可预测的觅食条件和温度调节成本增加对缓冲液的适应性反应。在暴露量较低的近岸地区,苏格兰人在整个冬季保持较低的脂质质量。整个冬季,所有地点的总脂质质量均下降,这一结果与许多水禽物种的发现一致。但是,血浆代谢物(甘油三酸酯,β-羟基丁酸酯)的水平随部位变化不大,这表明,不管身体组成如何,所有部位的鸟类都保持生理稳态。消化形态与饮食密切相关,,较小,肠更长,饮食中的软性食物比例较高。我们的结果表明,越冬的白翅苏格兰人的生理和能量管理与当地栖息地条件有关。

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