Life in extreme environments: Investigations on the ecophysiology of a desert bird, the Australian Diamond Dove (Geopelia cuneataLatham)
✍ Scribed by Elke Schleucher; Roland Prinzinger; Philip C. Withers
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 528 KB
- Volume
- 88
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0029-8549
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✦ Synopsis
The Diamond Dove, Geopelia cuneata, is the world's second smallest (ca. 35 g) species of the columbid order. The Diamond Dove is endemic in the arid and semiarid Mulga and Spinifex regions of Central and Western Australia. It regularly encounters ambient temperatures (T ) in its habitat above +40° C, especially when foraging for seeds on bare ground cover, and may be found at up to 40 km from water. This entails extreme thermal stress, with evaporative cooling constrained by limited water supply. Energy metabolism (M), respiration, body temperature (T ) and water budget were examined with regard to physiological adaptations to these extreme environmental conditions. The zone of thermal neutrality (TNZ) extended from +34° C to at least +45° C. Basal metabolic rate (BMR) was 34.10±4.19 J gh, corresponding to the values predicted for a typical columbid bird. Thermal conductance (C) was higher than predicted. Geopelia cuneata showed the typical breathing pattern of doves, a combination of normal breathing at a stable frequency (ca. 60 min) at low T and panting followed by gular flutter (up to 960 min) at high T . At T > +36° C, T increased to considerably higher levels without increasing metabolic rate, i.e. Q=1. This enabled the doves not only to store heat but also to save the amout of water that would have been required for evaporative cooling if T had remained constant. The birds were able to dissipate more than 100% of the metabolic heat by evaporation at T ≥ +44° C. This was achieved by gular flutter (an extremely effective mechanism for evaporation), and also by a low metabolic rate due to the low Q value for metabolism during increased T . At lower T , Geopelia cuneata predominantly relied on non-evaporative mechanisms during heat stress, to save water. Total evaporative water loss over the whole T range was 19-33% lower than expected. In this respect, their small body size proved to be an important advantage for successful survival in hot and arid environments.