Malnutrition during the postnuptial molt of White-crowned Sparrows: feather growth and quality
- 1 June 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Zoology
- Vol. 66 (6) , 1403-1413
- https://doi.org/10.1139/z88-206
Abstract
It has often been alleged that avian molt can be interrupted or delayed by food deprivation or malnutrition. We examined this experimentally in captive White-crowned Sparrows (Zonotrichia leucophrys gambelii). Beginning either at the natural onset of postnuptial molt or 1 month before its onset, groups of birds were fed either inadequate amounts of a balanced diet (60 or 80% of the ad libitum intake of a control group) or unlimited amounts of a diet deficient only in cyst(e)ine and methionine. Except in the 60% premolt group, the malnourished birds did not postpone or interrupt molt in spite of losses ranging from 20 to 38% of initial body mass. Molt was significantly protracted in all except the 60% premolt group as a result of both increased shedding interval and decreased feather growth rates. Their new plumage weighed less than that of control birds, and their remiges were slightly shorter and often deformed or achromatic. The occurrence of fault bars corresponded to the times when the birds were handled, but was not correlated with other plumage defects. Surviving birds of the 60% premolt group did not molt until allowed to feed ad libitum, but then produced a normal plumage in about two-thirds of the time required by the controls. To summarize, molt is a very conservative aspect of self maintenance that is distorted only by planes of malnutrition that free-living sparrows either do not encounter during the summer or do not survive.This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Amino Acid Composition of the Calamus, Rachis, and Barbs of White-Crowned Sparrow FeathersOrnithological Applications, 1987
- Sulfur Amino Acid Nutrition during Molt in the White-Crowned Sparrow. 2. Nitrogen and Sulfur Balance in Birds Fed Graded Levels of the Sulfur-Containing Amino AcidsOrnithological Applications, 1984
- Sulfur Amino Acid Nutrition during Molt in the White-Crowned Sparrow. 1. Does Dietary Sulfur Amino Acid Concentration Affect the Energetics of Molt as Assayed by Metabolized Energy?Ornithological Applications, 1984
- Amino Acid Composition of the Plumage of the White-Crowned SparrowOrnithological Applications, 1982
- Comparison of Fortified Ground Corn and Pullet Grower Feeding Regimes during a Forced Molt on Subsequent Layer Performance , , ,Poultry Science, 1979
- Effects of Photoperiod and Temperature on Postnuptial Molt in Captive White-Crowned SparrowsOrnithological Applications, 1978
- Studies on Copper and Iron Deficiencies in Growing ChickensJournal of Nutrition, 1961
- Achromatosis in the Feathers of Chicks Fed Lysine-deficient DietsJournal of Nutrition, 1957
- A Feathering Syndrome in Chicks After Feeding Optimal Levels of Lysine in Absence of ArginineExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1950
- THE GENESIS OF FAULT-BARS IN FEATHERS AND THE CAUSE OF ALTERNATION OF LIGHT AND DARK FUNDAMENTAL BARSThe Biological Bulletin, 1908