Basal metabolic rate and risk‐taking behaviour in birds
Open Access
- 13 November 2009
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Evolutionary Biology
- Vol. 22 (12) , 2420-2429
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1420-9101.2009.01850.x
Abstract
Basal metabolic rate (BMR) constitutes the minimal metabolic rate in the zone of thermo‐neutrality, where heat production is not elevated for temperature regulation. BMR thus constitutes the minimum metabolic rate that is required for maintenance. Interspecific variation in BMR in birds is correlated with food habits, climate, habitat, flight activity, torpor, altitude, and migration, although the selective forces involved in the evolution of these presumed adaptations are not always obvious. I suggest that BMR constitutes the minimum level required for maintenance, and that variation in this minimum level reflects the fitness costs and benefits in terms of ability to respond to selective agents like predators, implying that an elevated level of BMR is a cost of wariness towards predators. This hypothesis predicts a positive relationship between BMR and measures of risk taking such as flight initiation distance (FID) of individuals approached by a potential predator. Consistent with this suggestion, I show in a comparative analysis of 76 bird species that species with higher BMR for their body mass have longer FID when approached by a potential predator. This effect was independent of potentially confounding variables and similarity among species due to common phylogenetic descent. These results imply that BMR is positively related to risk‐taking behaviour, and that predation constitutes a neglected factor in the evolution of BMR.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Predators and the breeding bird: behavioral and reproductive flexibility under the risk of predationBiological Reviews, 2009
- Predator perches: a visual search perspectiveFunctional Ecology, 2009
- A Phylogenomic Study of Birds Reveals Their Evolutionary HistoryScience, 2008
- Phenotypic plasticity in the scaling of avian basal metabolic rateProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2006
- The broad‐scale ecology of energy expenditure of endothermsEcology Letters, 2005
- A farewell to Bonferroni: the problems of low statistical power and publication biasBehavioral Ecology, 2004
- The Zoogeography of Mammalian Basal Metabolic RateThe American Naturalist, 2000
- The Adjustment of Avian Metabolic Rates and Water Fluxes to Desert EnvironmentsPhysiological and Biochemical Zoology, 2000
- An optimum body size for mammals? Comparative evidence from batsFunctional Ecology, 1997
- Phylogenies and the Comparative MethodThe American Naturalist, 1985