The Adjustment of Avian Metabolic Rates and Water Fluxes to Desert Environments
- 1 July 2000
- journal article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in Physiological and Biochemical Zoology
- Vol. 73 (4) , 461-479
- https://doi.org/10.1086/317740
Abstract
We tested the hypothesis that birds in arid environments, where primary productivity is low and surface water is scarce, have reduced energy expenditure and water loss compared with their mesic counterparts. Using both conventional least squares regression and regression based on phylogenetically independent contrasts, we showed that birds from desert habitats have reduced basal and field metabolic rates compared with species from mesic areas. Previous work showed that desert birds have reduced rates of total evaporative water loss when exposed to moderate environmental temperatures in the laboratory. We tested whether reduced rates of total evaporative water loss translate into low field water fluxes. Conventional ANCOVA indicated that desert birds have reduced water fluxes, but an analysis based on phylogenetically independent contrasts did not support this finding, despite the wide array of taxonomic affiliations of species in the data set. We conclude that the high ambient temperatures, the low primary productivity, and the water scarcity in desert environments have selected for or resulted in reduced rates of energy expenditure and evaporative water loss in birds that live in these climes.Keywords
This publication has 143 references indexed in Scilit:
- Field Metabolism and Water Requirements of Spinifex Pigeons (Geophaps-Plumifera) in Western-AustraliaAustralian Journal of Zoology, 1995
- Field metabolic rate of blue grouse during winterCanadian Journal of Zoology, 1994
- Winter energy requirements of blue grouseCanadian Journal of Zoology, 1992
- Energetic demands during brood rearing in the Wheatear Oenanthe oenantheIbis, 1990
- Energetics of the annual cycle of Dippers Cinclus cinclusIbis, 1988
- Phylogenies and the Comparative MethodThe American Naturalist, 1985
- Plasma thyroxine levels of mammals: Desert and mountainLife Sciences, 1976
- Regulation of body temperature in the Budherygah, Melopsittacus undulatusAustralian Journal of Zoology, 1976
- Counter-current heat exchange in the respiratory passages: Effect on water and heat balanceRespiration Physiology, 1970
- Theory of use of the turnover rates of body water for measuring energy and material balanceJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1966