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Metabolic adjustments in breeding female kittiwakes (<Emphasis Type="Italic">Rissa tridactyla</Emphasis>) include changes in kidney metabolic intensity
Authors:Bernt Rønning  Børge Moe  Olivier Chastel  Juli Broggi  Magdalene Langset  Claus Bech
Institution:Department of Biology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway. bernt.ronning@bio.ntnu.no
Abstract:Black-legged kittiwakes (BLKIs) reduce self-maintenance cost through reductions in mass-specific basal metabolic rate (BMR), body mass and the size of visceral organs during the chick-rearing period. In the present study, we measured kidney in vitro oxygen consumption and plasma 3,3',5-triiodo-L: -thyronine (T3) levels of incubating and chick-rearing female BLKIs, to test whether the decrease in BMR is caused mainly by decreased metabolic intensity or simply by reductions in the size of organs with high metabolic intensity. Body mass and body condition were lower in chick-rearing birds compared with the incubating birds. In contrast to the previous findings, however, the kidney mass did not differ between the two breeding stages. Plasma T3 levels decreased substantially during the breeding season, indicating a reduction in BMR. Over the same period, kidney mass-specific oxygen consumption decreased (by 17.2%) from the incubating to the chick-rearing stage. Thus, the reduction in BMR found in breeding BLKIs seems partly explained by adjustments in metabolic intensity of visceral organs. Lowered metabolic intensity of visceral organs would permit increased allocation of energy to offspring at the expense of their own self-maintenance.
Keywords:Kittiwake  Breeding  Metabolism  Thyroid hormones  Kidney
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