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首页> 外文期刊>The Journal of Experimental Biology >Metabolic adjustments to increasing foraging costs of starlings in a closed economy
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Metabolic adjustments to increasing foraging costs of starlings in a closed economy

机译:封闭经济中对star鸟觅食成本的代谢调整

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Knowledge of the physiological consequences of variation in food availability may be essential for understanding behavioural and life history responses to such variation. To study the physiological consequences of food availability animals are generally subjected to caloric restriction or starvation, thereby reducing the upper limit to the energy budget. The relevance of this approach to free-living animals is questionable, however, because under natural conditions low food availability often results in higher foraging costs, and everything else remaining equal this results in a higher energy budget. We manipulated food availability by varying the foraging costs and studied effects on daily energy expenditure (DEE) and energy allocation of captive starlings Sturnus vulgatis. Birds in a closed economy earned their food by flying between two perches 5 m apart. The probability of a reward was set at three different levels, thereby creating a 'poor', 'intermediate' and 'rich' environment. Compared with the rich environment, birds flew 4 times more (2.3 h per day) in the poor environment, and increased DEE by 43% to 220 kJ day(-1) (3.7 x BMR), within the range of free-living parents rearing young. To our knowledge this is the first study to show an increase in DEE with decreasing food availability. Body mass, basal metabolic rate (BMR) and pectoral muscle size were reduced in the poor environment. Nocturnal energy expenditure was further reduced by reaching BMR earlier in the night. Calculations show that the energy demands in the poor environment could not be met with the flight costs of 20.5 W that we measured previously in a rich environment. Flight costs derived indirectly from the energy budget were lower, at 17.5 W, probably due to lower body mass. By reducing body mass by 20%, and economising during sleep, the birds achieved savings of 37% in their DEE. Without these savings, a DEE substantially higher than measured in free-living parents rearing young would be required to remain in energy balance. Surprisingly little data exist to verify whether free-living animals use the same tactics to survive periods with low food availability.
机译:了解食物供应量变化的生理后果可能对于理解行为和生活史对这种变化的反应至关重要。为了研究可得食物的生理后果,通常使动物受到热量的限制或饥饿,从而降低了能量预算的上限。然而,这种方法与自由生活动物的相关性值得怀疑,因为在自然条件下,粮食供应不足通常会导致较高的觅食成本,而其他所有条件保持不变,则会导致较高的能源预算。我们通过改变觅食成本来操纵食物的供应,并研究了圈养八哥star(Sturnus vulgatis)对日常能量消耗(DEE)和能量分配的影响。封闭经济中的鸟类通过在相距5 m的两个栖息处之间飞行而获得食物。奖励的可能性设置在三个不同的级别,从而创造了一个“差”,“中”和“富”的环境。与繁华的环境相比,在自由生活的父母范围内,鸟类在恶劣的环境中飞行了四倍(每天2.3小时),并且DEE增加了43%,达到220 kJ·天(-1)(3.7 x BMR)。抚养年轻。据我们所知,这是第一个显示DEE随着食物供应量减少而增加的研究。在恶劣的环境中,体重,基础代谢率(BMR)和胸肌尺寸均降低。晚上早些时候到达BMR,进一步减少了夜间能量消耗。计算表明,我们之前在富裕环境中测得的20.5 W的飞行成本无法满足恶劣环境中的能源需求。由能量预算间接产生的飞行成本较低,为17.5 W,这可能是由于体重降低所致。通过减少20%的体重并节省睡眠时间,家禽的DEE节省了37%。如果没有这些节省,则将需要保持DEE显着高于抚养年轻的自由生活父母的DEE,以保持能量平衡。令人惊讶的是,几乎没有数据可以证明自由生活的动物是否使用相同的策略来生存于食物匮乏的时期。

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