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1.
Mar Pollut Bull ; 181: 113919, 2022 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35816822

ABSTRACT

Mercury is a pervasive environmental contaminant that can negatively impact seabirds. Here, we measure total mercury (THg) concentrations in red blood cells (RBCs) from breeding brown skuas (Stercorarius antarcticus) (n = 49) at Esperanza/Hope Bay, Antarctic Peninsula. The aims of this study were to: (i) analyse RBCs THg concentrations in relation to sex, year and stable isotope values of carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N); and (ii) examine correlations between THg, body condition and breeding success. RBC THg concentrations were positively correlated with δ15N, which is a proxy of trophic position, and hence likely reflects the biomagnification process. Levels of Hg contamination differed between our study years, which is likely related to changes in diet and distribution. RBC THg concentrations were not related to body condition or breeding success, suggesting that Hg contamination is currently not a major conservation concern for this population.


Subject(s)
Charadriiformes , Mercury , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Animals , Ecology , Environmental Monitoring , Food Chain , Isotopes/analysis , Mercury/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35051629

ABSTRACT

Reproduction, and parental care in particular, are among the most energy-demanding activities within the annual cycle of adult birds. Parents that cannot meet the metabolic demands and other physiological costs of raising offspring may opt to abandon chicks in favour of self-maintenance and future reproduction. Recent work examining reproductive trade-offs in birds revealed an important role of oxygen carrying capacity in mediating variation in parental effort. This study explores the aerobic factors underlying the success or failure of parental care in two closely-related petrel species during their breeding season on Bird Island, South Georgia: northern giant petrels (Macronectes halli) and southern giant petrels (M. giganteus). Failed breeders of both sexes and species had significantly lower hematocrit levels (by 5.48 ± 0.64%) than successful breeders, and reticulocyte counts also tended to be lower in failed males, consistent with the hypothesis that parental care and workload depend on aerobic capacity. We discuss these results in relation to differences in the foraging ecology of both species and sexes.


Subject(s)
Birds , Reproduction , Animals , Birds/physiology , Female , Male , Reproduction/physiology , Seasons
3.
Mar Biol ; 165(10): 152, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30220735

ABSTRACT

Many predictive models of spatial and temporal distribution (e.g. in response to climate change or species introductions) assume that species have one environmental niche that applies to all individuals. However, there is growing evidence that individuals can have environmental preferences that are narrower than the species niche. Such individual specialization has mainly been studied in terms of dietary niches, but a recent increase in the availability of individual movement data opens the possibility of extending these analyses to specialisation in environmental preferences. Yet, no study to date on individual specialisation has considered the environmental niche in its multidimensionality. Here we propose a new method for quantifying individual specialisation in multiple dimensions simultaneously. We compare the hypervolumes in n-dimensional environmental niche space of each individual against that of the population, testing for significant differences against a null model. The same method can be applied to a 2-dimensional geographic space to test for site fidelity. We applied this method to test for individual environmental specialisation (across three dimensions: sea surface temperature, eddy kinetic energy, depth) and for site fidelity among satellite-tracked black-browed albatrosses (Thalassarche melanophris) and grey-headed albatrosses (Thalassarche chrysostoma), during chick-rearing at South Georgia. We found evidence for site fidelity in both species and of environmental specialisation among individual grey-headed but not black-browed albatrosses. Specialisation can affect the resilience of populations affected by natural and anthropogenic changes in the environment, and hence has implications for population dynamics and conservation.

4.
Curr Anesthesiol Rep ; 7(4): 387-398, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29200974

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Adequate oxygen delivery is essential for life, with hypoxia resulting in dysfunction, and ultimately death, of the cells, organs and organism. Blood flow delivers the oxygen bound in the blood, while haemodynamics is the science of blood flow. Stroke volume (SV) is the fundamental unit of blood flow, and reflects the interdependent performance of the heart, the vessels and the autonomic nervous system. However, haemodynamic management remains generally poor and predominantly guided by simple blood pressure observations alone. RECENT FINDINGS: Doppler ultrasound measures SV with unequalled clinical precision when operated by trained personnel. Combining SV with BP measurements allows calculation of flow-pressure based measures which better reflect cardiovascular performance and allows personalised physiologic and pathophysiologic modelling consistent with Frank's and Starling's observations. SUMMARY: Doppler SV monitoring and novel flow-pressure parameters may improve our understanding of the cardiovascular system and lead to improved diagnosis and therapy. This review examines the physics and practice of Doppler SV monitoring and its application in advanced haemodynamics.

5.
Ecology ; 97(8): 1919-1928, 2016 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27859185

ABSTRACT

In the open ocean ecosystem, climate and anthropogenic changes have driven biological change at both ends of the food chain. Understanding how the population dynamics of pelagic predators are simultaneously influenced by nutrient-driven processes acting from the "bottom-up" and predator-driven processes acting from the "top-down" is therefore considered an urgent task. Using a state-space demographic model, we evaluated the population trajectory of an oceanic predator, the Macaroni Penguin (Eudyptes chrysolophus), and numerically assessed the relative importance of bottom-up and top-down drivers acting through different demographic rates. The population trajectory was considerably more sensitive to changes in top-down control of survival compared to bottom-up control of survival or productivity. This study integrates a unique set of demographic and covariate data and highlights the benefits of using a single estimation framework to examine the links between covariates, demographic rates and population dynamics.


Subject(s)
Aquatic Organisms/physiology , Ecosystem , Predatory Behavior , Animals , Food Chain , Oceans and Seas , Population Dynamics
6.
Ecology ; 95(8): 2077-83, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25230460

ABSTRACT

Carry-over effects have major implications for individual fitness and population and evolutionary dynamics. The strength of these effects is dependent on an individual's intrinsic performance and the environmental conditions it experiences. However, understanding the relative importance of environmental and intrinsic effects underpinning seasonal interactions has proved extremely challenging, since they covary. A powerful approach is longitudinal measurement of individuals across a range of conditions, whereby each animal is effectively acting as its own control. We related time spent foraging during the nonbreeding period to subsequent breeding performance in European Shags Phalacrocorax aristotelis. By following individuals for up to six years, we could test simultaneously for extrinsic and intrinsic effects using random regression modeling. We detected significant annual and among-individual variation in daily foraging time during the late winter, and clear variation among individuals in the quadratic relationship between foraging time and date. Shorter foraging times were associated with earlier and more successful breeding, driven by differences among years and individuals, with no evidence of individual variation in the slope of these relationships. That both environmental and intrinsic variation shape carry-over effects has important implications for population responses to environmental change.


Subject(s)
Birds/physiology , Forestry , Longevity , Animals , Population Dynamics
7.
Environ Pollut ; 181: 315-20, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23859845

ABSTRACT

Although mercury bio-amplifies through the food chain and accumulates in top predators, mercury concentrations in tissues of the wandering albatross are greater than in any other vertebrate, including closely related species. In order to explore the alternative explanations for this pattern, we measured total mercury concentrations in feathers, plasma and blood cells of wandering albatrosses of known age, sex and breeding status sampled at South Georgia. Mercury concentrations were low in feathers and blood components of chicks, and higher in the feathers of young pre-breeders than in feathers or blood of older pre-breeders and breeding adults. There was no effect of sex on mercury concentrations in the feathers of pre-breeders or breeding adults, whereas levels were significantly higher in blood cells of breeding females than males. The high feather mercury concentrations of young pre-breeders compared with older birds suggest an increase in moult frequency as birds approach maturity.


Subject(s)
Birds/metabolism , Environmental Pollutants/metabolism , Mercury/metabolism , Animals , Breeding , Environmental Monitoring , Feathers/metabolism , Female , Food Chain , Male
9.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 54(2): 472-87, 2010 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19755164

ABSTRACT

We examine global phylogeography of the two forms of giant petrel Macronectes spp. Although previously considered to be a single taxon, and despite debate over the status of some populations and the existence of minimal genetic data (one mitochondrial cytochrome b sequence per form), the current consensus based on morphology is that there are two species, Northern Giant Petrel M. halli and Southern Giant Petrel M. giganteus. This study examined genetic variation at cytochrome b as well as six microsatellite loci in giant petrels from 22 islands, representing most island groups at which the two species breed. Both markers support separate species status, although sequence divergence in cytochrome b was only 0.42% (corrected). Divergence was estimated to have occurred approximately 0.2mya, but with some colonies apparently separated for longer (up to 0.5 my). Three clades were found within giant petrels, which separated approximately 0.7mya, with the Southern Giant Petrel paraphyletic to a monophyletic Northern Giant Petrel. There was evidence of past fragmentation during the Pleistocene, with subsequent secondary contact within Southern Giant Petrels. The analysis also suggested a period of past population expansion that corresponded roughly to the timing of speciation and the separation of an ancestral giant petrel population from the fulmar Fulmarus clade.


Subject(s)
Birds/genetics , Genetic Speciation , Genetics, Population , Phylogeny , Animals , Birds/classification , Cytochromes b/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Gene Flow , Genetic Variation , Geography , Haplotypes , Microsatellite Repeats , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Species Specificity
10.
Environ Pollut ; 158(1): 98-107, 2010 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19713018

ABSTRACT

We investigated the concentrations of 22 essential and non-essential elements among a community of Procellariiformes (and their prey) to identify the extent to which trophic position and foraging range governed element accumulation. Stable isotope analysis (SIA) was used to characterise trophic (delta(15)N) and spatial patterns (delta(13)C) among species. Few consistent patterns were observed in element distributions among species and diet appeared to be highly influential in some instances. Arsenic levels in seabird red blood cells correlated with delta(15)N and delta(13)C, demonstrating the importance of trophic position and foraging range for arsenic distribution. Arsenic concentrations in prey varied significantly across taxa, and in the strength of association with delta(15)N values (trophic level). In most instances, element patterns in Procellariiformes showed the clearest separation among species, indicating that a combination of prey selection and other complex species-specific characteristics (e.g. moult patterns) were generally more important determining factors than trophic level per se.


Subject(s)
Birds/blood , Animals , Arsenic/analysis , Arsenic/blood , Cadmium/analysis , Cadmium/blood , Carbon Isotopes/analysis , Carbon Isotopes/blood , Georgia , Molybdenum/analysis , Molybdenum/blood , Nitrogen Isotopes/analysis , Nitrogen Isotopes/blood , Rubidium/analysis , Rubidium/blood , Selenium/analysis , Selenium/blood
11.
Proc Biol Sci ; 276(1660): 1215-23, 2009 Apr 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19141421

ABSTRACT

The migratory movements of seabirds (especially smaller species) remain poorly understood, despite their role as harvesters of marine ecosystems on a global scale and their potential as indicators of ocean health. Here we report a successful attempt, using miniature archival light loggers (geolocators), to elucidate the migratory behaviour of the Manx shearwater Puffinus puffinus, a small (400 g) Northern Hemisphere breeding procellariform that undertakes a trans-equatorial, trans-Atlantic migration. We provide details of over-wintering areas, of previously unobserved marine stopover behaviour, and the long-distance movements of females during their pre-laying exodus. Using salt-water immersion data from a subset of loggers, we introduce a method of behaviour classification based on Bayesian machine learning techniques. We used both supervised and unsupervised machine learning to classify each bird's daily activity based on simple properties of the immersion data. We show that robust activity states emerge, characteristic of summer feeding, winter feeding and active migration. These can be used to classify probable behaviour throughout the annual cycle, highlighting the likely functional significance of stopovers as refuelling stages.


Subject(s)
Animal Migration/physiology , Artificial Intelligence , Birds/physiology , Animals , Bayes Theorem , Female , Oceans and Seas , Telemetry
12.
Science ; 321(5896): 1681-2, 2008 Sep 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18687923

ABSTRACT

Parasitism can be a major constraint on host condition and an important selective force. Theoretical and empirical evidence shows that maternal condition affects relative investment in sons and daughters; however, the effect of parasitism on sex ratio in vertebrates is seldom considered. We demonstrate experimentally that parasitism constrains the ability of mothers to rear sons in a long-lived seabird, the European shag Phalacrocorax aristotelis. The effect contributes to the decline in offspring survival as the breeding season progresses and hence has important population-level consequences for this, and potentially other, seasonal breeders.


Subject(s)
Ascaridida Infections/veterinary , Bird Diseases/physiopathology , Birds/physiology , Birds/parasitology , Ivermectin/therapeutic use , Nesting Behavior , Sex Ratio , Animals , Antinematodal Agents/therapeutic use , Ascaridida Infections/drug therapy , Ascaridida Infections/physiopathology , Ascaridoidea , Bird Diseases/drug therapy , Feeding Behavior , Female , Male , Reproduction , Sex Characteristics , Survival Rate
13.
Diabet Med ; 24(7): 759-63, 2007 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17451422

ABSTRACT

AIMS: To determine whether the beneficial effects of carvedilol on insulin resistance (IR) are affected by the concomitant use of insulin sensitizers [thiazolidinediones (TZDs) and metformin]. METHODS: Changes in HbA1c and homeostasis model assessment-insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) were assessed over 5 months, comparing carvedilol with metoprolol tartrate according to insulin sensitizer (TZDs and metformin) use. RESULTS: In TZD/metformin users, carvedilol patients showed a 5.4% decrease [95% confidence interval (CI) -11.9, 1.6; P = 0.13] and metoprolol tartrate patients showed a 2.8% decrease (95% CI -8.5, 3.2; P = 0.35) in HOMA-IR. The -2.6% difference between treatments was not significant (95% CI -10.7, 6.2; P = 0.55). In contrast, those not taking TZD/metformin experienced a 13.2% increase in HOMA-IR on metoprolol tartrate (95% CI 3.2, 24.1; P < 0.01) and a 4.8% decrease in HOMA-IR on carvedilol (95% CI -14.6, 6.0; P = 0.37), with a significant treatment difference of -15.9% favouring carvedilol (95% CI -26.6, -3.6; P = 0.01). There was no significant treatment interaction for the use of TZD/metformin and HbA1c. A statistically significant treatment difference was observed for HbA1c after 5 months favouring carvedilol after adjusting for insulin sensitizer use (-0.11%, 95% CI -0.214, -0.009; P = 0.03). CONCLUSIONS: In patients with diabetes and hypertension not taking insulin sensitizers, the use of metoprolol tartrate resulted in a worsening of insulin resistance, an effect not seen with carvedilol. However, in TZD/metformin users the difference between the beta-blockers was not statistically significant.


Subject(s)
Adrenergic beta-Antagonists/therapeutic use , Antihypertensive Agents/therapeutic use , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/drug therapy , Hypertension/drug therapy , Insulin Resistance/physiology , Blood Glucose/metabolism , Carbazoles/therapeutic use , Carvedilol , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/blood , Female , Humans , Male , Metformin/therapeutic use , Metoprolol/therapeutic use , Middle Aged , Propanolamines/therapeutic use , Thiazolidinediones/therapeutic use , Treatment Outcome
14.
Diabetes Obes Metab ; 9(3): 408-17, 2007 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17391169

ABSTRACT

AIM: The Glycemic Effect in Diabetes Mellitus: Carvedilol-Metoprolol Comparison in Hypertensives (GEMINI) trial compared the metabolic effects of two beta-blockers in people with type 2 diabetes and hypertension treated with renin-angiotensin system (RAS) blockade and found differences in metabolic outcomes. In this paper, we report the results of a prespecified secondary analysis of GEMINI that sought to determine the effect of these two beta-blockers on commonly reported symptoms. METHODS: The Diabetes Symptom Checklist (DSC), a self-report questionnaire measuring the occurrence and perceived burden of diabetes-related symptoms, was completed by GEMINI participants at baseline and at the end of the study (maintenance month 5). The DSC assessed symptoms in eight domains: psychology (fatigue), psychology (cognitive), neuropathy (pain), neuropathy (sensory), cardiology, ophthalmology, hyperglycaemia and hypoglycaemia. RESULTS: Comparison of the mean change in self-reported diabetes-related symptoms indicated a significant treatment difference favouring carvedilol over metoprolol tartrate in overall symptom score (-0.08; 95% CI -0.15, -0.01; p = 0.02) and in the domains for hypoglycaemia symptoms (-0.12; 95% CI -0.23, -0.02; p = 0.02) and hyperglycaemia symptoms (-0.16; 95% CI -0.27, -0.05; p = 0.005). Carvedilol resulted in fewer perceived diabetes-related symptoms in patients with diabetes and hypertension. CONCLUSION: Carvedilol resulted in a lower perceived burden of diabetes-related symptoms in patients with type 2 diabetes and hypertension. The addition of a well-tolerated beta-blocker to RAS blockade may improve hypertension treatment and quality of life in patients with diabetes.


Subject(s)
Adrenergic beta-Antagonists/therapeutic use , Carbazoles/therapeutic use , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/drug therapy , Metoprolol/therapeutic use , Propanolamines/therapeutic use , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Carvedilol , Cognition/drug effects , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/physiopathology , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/psychology , Double-Blind Method , Fatigue/psychology , Female , Humans , Hyperglycemia/physiopathology , Hypertension/drug therapy , Hypertension/physiopathology , Hypertension/psychology , Hypoglycemia/physiopathology , Male , Middle Aged , Nervous System Diseases/physiopathology , Pain/physiopathology , Renin-Angiotensin System/drug effects , Treatment Outcome
15.
Minerva Med ; 96(4): 247-60, 2005 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16179892

ABSTRACT

The main goal of current antihypertensive therapy is to achieve a lowering of intra-arterial pressure by various mechanisms. A plethora of data suggests that this reduces cardiovascular morbidity and mortality due to stroke, heart failure and to a lesser extent, ischemic heart disease. Early cardiac manifestations of chronic hypertension, left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and diastolic dysfunction (CHF-D) confer additional risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in patients with hypertension. Regression of left ventricular (LV) mass with antihypertensive therapy is associated with improved diastolic function and overall reduction in cardiovascular events, and this benefit may be independent of actual lowering of arterial pressure. Antihypertensive therapy should therefore be geared to both lower arterial blood pressure and specifically reverse pathophysiologic processes that promote LVH and CHF-D. Emerging therapies accomplish this without specifically affecting blood pressure. Therefore, future treatments for hypertension may require a combination of drugs performing complimentary tasks in lowering arterial pressure and reversing maladaptive physiologic and genetic processes causing hypertensive heart disease. This review summarizes the current and emerging approaches to the treatment of individuals with hypertensive heart disease.


Subject(s)
Antihypertensive Agents/therapeutic use , Hypertension/drug therapy , Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular/drug therapy , Cardiac Output, Low/prevention & control , Cardiovascular Agents/therapeutic use , Heart Failure/prevention & control , Humans , Hypertension/complications , Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular/complications , Ventricular Dysfunction, Left/physiopathology
16.
Diabetes Obes Metab ; 7(4): 370-80, 2005 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15955123

ABSTRACT

AIM: The authors wished to compare the strength of association of several anthropometric measures of body size and fat distribution among themselves and in comparison with other known risk factors for prevalent coronary heart disease (CHD). METHODS: Prevalent CHD was assessed in 466 middle-aged, male, multiracial Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority officers in New York City by verified history, electrocardiogram or exercise stress test. Anthropometric measures included body mass index, waist, hip and thigh circumferences, waist-hip ratio, waist-thigh ratio, sagittal abdominal diameter and abdominal diameter index (sagittal abdominal diameter/thigh circumference). Results were compared with other CHD risk factors measured simultaneously (history of diabetes, smoking, blood pressure, lipid profile, apolipoproteins A and B, lipoprotein (a), homocysteine, fibrinogen, urinary microalbumin, serum vitamin E and ferritin) and a calculated 10-year CHD risk using a Framingham algorithm (10-year Framingham CHD risk). RESULTS: CHD was found in 29 individuals. Of the six anthropometric measures, abdominal diameter index gave the largest and most significant standardized odds ratio (OR) for CHD [1.80, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.20, 2.71], equivalent to 10-year Framingham CHD risk. Men in the highest compared with the lowest tertile of abdominal diameter index had a univariate OR of 5.47 (95% CI 1.55, 19.28) which was the only anthropometric measure that remained significant after adjusting for 10-year Framingham CHD risk. CONCLUSIONS: For middle-aged American men, abdominal diameter index may be the most powerful anthropometric measure of risk for prevalent CHD.


Subject(s)
Abdomen/pathology , Coronary Disease/epidemiology , Adipose Tissue/pathology , Adult , Albuminuria/complications , Albuminuria/epidemiology , Body Weights and Measures/methods , Cholesterol/blood , Coronary Disease/metabolism , Coronary Disease/pathology , Ferritins/blood , Humans , Insulin Resistance/physiology , Male , Middle Aged , New York City/epidemiology , Obesity/complications , Obesity/epidemiology , Prevalence , Risk Assessment/methods , Risk Factors , Triglycerides/blood , Vitamin E/blood
17.
J Safety Res ; 35(5): 497-512, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15530924

ABSTRACT

PROBLEM: Safety climate refers to the degree to which employees believe true priority is given to organizational safety performance, and its measurement is thought to provide an "early warning" of potential safety system failure(s). However, researchers have struggled over the last 25 years to find empirical evidence to demonstrate actual links between safety climate and safety performance. METHOD: A safety climate measure was distributed to manufacturing employees at the beginning of a behavioral safety initiative and redistributed one year later. RESULTS: Multiple regression analysis demonstrated that perceptions of the importance of safety training were predictive of actual levels of safety behavior. The results also demonstrate that the magnitude of change in perceptual safety climate scores will not necessarily match actual changes (r=0.56, n.s.) in employee's safety behavior. DISCUSSION: This study obtained empirical links between safety climate scores and actual safety behavior. Confirming and contradicting findings within the extant safety climate literature, the results strongly suggest that the hypothesized climate-behavior-accident path is not as clear cut as commonly assumed. SUMMARY: A statistical link between safety climate perceptions and safety behavior will be obtained when sufficient behavioral data is collected. IMPACT ON INDUSTRY: The study further supports the use of safety climate measures as useful diagnostic tools in ascertaining employee's perceptions of the way that safety is being operationalized.


Subject(s)
Accidents, Occupational/prevention & control , Health Behavior , Occupational Health , Workplace/organization & administration , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Organizational Culture , Pilot Projects , Surveys and Questionnaires
18.
Proc Biol Sci ; 271(1545): 1283-91, 2004 Jun 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15306353

ABSTRACT

Sexual segregation by micro- or macrohabitat is common in birds, and usually attributed to size-mediated dominance and exclusion of females by larger males, trophic niche divergence or reproductive role specialization. Our study of black-browed albatrosses, Thalassarche melanophrys, and grey-headed albatrosses, T. chrysostoma, revealed an exceptional degree of sexual segregation during incubation, with largely mutually exclusive core foraging ranges for each sex in both species. Spatial segregation was not apparent during brood-guard or post-guard chick rearing, when adults are constrained to feed close to colonies, providing no evidence for dominance-related competitive exclusion at the macrohabitat level. A comprehensive morphometric comparison indicated considerable species and sexual dimorphism in wing area and wing loading that corresponded, both within and between species, to broad-scale habitat preferences relating to wind strength. We suggest that seasonal sexual segregation in these two species is attributable to niche divergence mediated by differences in flight performance. Such sexual segregation may also have implications for conservation in relation to sex-specific overlap with commercial fisheries.


Subject(s)
Birds/physiology , Environment , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Reproduction/physiology , Seasons , Social Behavior , Animals , Body Weights and Measures , Conservation of Natural Resources , Female , Flight, Animal/physiology , Geography , Male , Nesting Behavior/physiology , Principal Component Analysis , Sex Factors , Species Specificity , Wind , Wings, Animal/anatomy & histology
19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12727555

ABSTRACT

The relative importance of genetic vs. environmental factors in determining the pattern of avian post-embryonic development is much debated. Previous cross-fostering of albatrosses suggested that although inter-specific variation in growth rate was determined primarily by differences in dietary energy content, species-specific constraints might have evolved that could limit maximal growth, even in chicks fed at similar rates and on similar diets. This study aimed to determine whether intrinsic differences in resting metabolic rate were apparent during the linear phase of growth in chicks of three species (black-browed, grey-headed and light-mantled sooty albatrosses). There was a gradual increase in absolute, and a reduction in mass-specific metabolic rate from 5.0 W kg(-1) during the earliest part of linear growth, to 3.5 W kg(-1) by the time chicks reached peak mass. These values are considerably higher than in resting adults of comparable or lower mass, presumably reflecting the large size and high metabolic demand of organs involved in rapid nutrient processing and tissue synthesis by chicks. The lack of any detectable inter-specific variation in the pattern of metabolic rate changes casts some doubt on the existence of fundamental differences in growth rate that cannot be attributed simply to differences in dietary energy or nutrient delivery rate.


Subject(s)
Birds/growth & development , Birds/metabolism , Age Factors , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Basal Metabolism/physiology , Body Constitution/physiology , Body Weight/physiology , Linear Models , Oxygen Consumption/physiology , Species Specificity
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