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DOI10.1242/jeb.199513
Short-term, but not long-term, increased daytime workload leads to decreased night-time energetics in a free-living song bird
Visser, Marcel E.1; van Dooremalen, Coby1,2; Tomotani, Barbara M.1,3; Bushuev, Andrey1,4; Meijer, Harro A. J.5; Marvelde, Luc To1; Gienapp, Phillip1
发表日期2019
ISSN0022-0949
EISSN1477-9145
卷号222期号:14
英文摘要

Reproduction is energetically expensive and to obtain sufficient energy, animals can either alter their metabolic system over time to increase energy intake (increased-intake hypothesis) or reallocate energy from maintenance processes (compensation hypothesis). The first hypothesis predicts a positive relationship between basal metabolic rate (BMR) and energy expenditure (DEE) because of the higher energy demands of the metabolic system at rest. The second hypothesis predicts a trade-off between different body functions, with a reduction of the BMR as a way to compensate for increased daytime energetic expenditure. We experimentally manipulated the workload of wild pied flycatchers by adding or removing chicks when chicks were 2 and 11 days old. We then measured the feeding frequency (FF). DEE and BMR at day 11, allowing us to assess both short- and long-term effects of increased workload. The manipulation at day 2 caused an increase in FF when broods were enlarged, but no response in DEE or BMR, while the manipulation at day 11 caused an increase in FF, no change in DEE and a decrease in BMR in birds with more chicks. Our results suggest that pied flycatchers adjust their workload but that this does not lead to a higher BMR at night (no support for the increased-intake hypothesis). In the short term, we found that birds reallocate energy with a consequent reduction of BMR (evidence for the compensation hypothesis). Birds thus resort to short-term strategies to increase energy expenditure, which could explain why energy expenditure and hard work are not always correlated in birds.


WOS研究方向Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics
来源期刊JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/99964
作者单位1.Netherlands Inst Ecol N100 KNAVV, Dept Anim Ecol, POB 50, NL-6700 AB Wageningen, Netherlands;
2.Wageningen Univ, Resource Ecol Grp, Bomsesteeg 69, NL-6708 PD Wageningen, Netherlands;
3.Museum New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington 6011, New Zealand;
4.Moscow MV Lomonosov State Univ, Fac Biol, Dept Vertebrate Zool, Moscow 119192, Russia;
5.Univ Groningen, Fac Sci & Engn, Ctr Isotope Res, Nijenborgh 6, NL-9747 AG Groningen, Netherlands
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Visser, Marcel E.,van Dooremalen, Coby,Tomotani, Barbara M.,et al. Short-term, but not long-term, increased daytime workload leads to decreased night-time energetics in a free-living song bird[J],2019,222(14).
APA Visser, Marcel E..,van Dooremalen, Coby.,Tomotani, Barbara M..,Bushuev, Andrey.,Meijer, Harro A. J..,...&Gienapp, Phillip.(2019).Short-term, but not long-term, increased daytime workload leads to decreased night-time energetics in a free-living song bird.JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY,222(14).
MLA Visser, Marcel E.,et al."Short-term, but not long-term, increased daytime workload leads to decreased night-time energetics in a free-living song bird".JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY 222.14(2019).
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