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Heterothermy in an Australian passerine, the Dusky Woodswallow (Artamus cyanopterus)
Authors:Tracy A. Maddocks and Fritz Geiser
Affiliation:(1) Centre for Behavioural and Physiological Ecology, Zoology, University of New England, Armidale, 2351, NSW, Australia;(2) Present address: Biological Sciences, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, 2522, NSW, Australia
Abstract:Information regarding passerine heterothermy and torpor is scant, although many species are small and must cope with a fluctuating food supply and presumably would benefit from energy savings afforded by torpor. We studied whether insectivorous Dusky Woodswallows (Artamus cyanopterus; ∼35 g) enter spontaneous torpor (food ad libitum) when held outdoors as a pair in autumn/winter. Woodswallows displayed pronounced and regular daily fluctuations in body temperature (T b) over the entire study period. The mean T b ranged from ∼39°C to 40°C (photophase, day time) and ∼33°C to 36°C (scotophase, night time). However, on 88% of bird nights, nocturnal T b minima fell to < 35°C. The lowest T b observed in air was 29.2°C. However, when a bird fell into water its T b dropped further to ∼22°C; this T b was regulated for several hours and the bird survived. Our observations suggest that heterothermy is a normal part of the daily thermal regime for woodswallows to minimise energy expenditure. Spontaneous nocturnal torpor in captive woodswallows suggests that torpor in the wild may be more pronounced than recorded here because free-living birds are likely challenged by both low food availability and adverse weather.
Keywords:Air  Body temperature  Energy conservation  Shallow torpor  Water
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