Weighing the cost: the impact of serial heatwaves on body mass in a small Australian passerine
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Sharpe, Lynda
Cale, Belinda
Gardner, Janet
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Munksgaard International Publishers
Abstract
Rising temperatures pose a grave risk to arid zone birds because they are already living close to their physiological limits and must balance water conservation against
the need for evaporative cooling. We assess how extreme temperatures affect a wild
population of small passerines by monitoring daily mass change in individual jacky
winters Microeca fascinans (a small Australasian robin) across a series of severe heatwaves that afflicted southern Australia in the summer of 2018–2019. Daily maximum
temperature and duration of heat exposure were negatively related to the birds’ ability
to maintain body mass. At maximum temperatures ≥ 42°C, birds lost 2.0% of their
body mass daily and at ≥ 45°C, 2.6%. Apparent mortality increased almost three-fold,
and all breeding birds abandoned their nests. Nevertheless, net daily mass loss was
less than might be expected from laboratory-based findings, presumably because wild
jacky winters undertook behavioural thermoregulation. The birds also regained some
mass between heatwave events and suffered no long-term reduction in body condition.
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Journal of Avian Biology
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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