Abstract

Precocial domestic chicks (Gallus domesticus) become endothermic at or soon after hatching, but when chilled still vocalize to solicit heat from a parent or surrogate. In this study, we examined the potential energy savings resulting from vocal solicitation of heat by comparing the oxygen consumption of 3-day-old chicks facing a cold challenge of 20 °C with and without the option of regulating ambient temperature by vocally soliciting 2-min periods of rewarming at 35 °C from a surrogate parent in the laboratory. Body temperature was unaffected by vocal regulation, but the thermal gradient between body and ambient temperature was reduced by 5.0 ± 0.4 °C (mean ± SE). Mass-specific oxygen consumption [Formula: see text] increased by 62.5% to a near steady state mean of 3.64 mL∙g−1∙h−1 during constant chilling at 20 °C, but increased by only 48.1%, to 3.08 mL∙g−1∙h−1, during vocal regulation. Relative to chilled controls, vocally regulating chicks had a mean net energy saving of 15.4% during the final, stable 15 min of testing. Vocal solicitation of heat from a brooding parent seems likely to be an important means of saving energy expended in thermoregulation in some precocial species when young chicks are exposed to low ambient temperatures under natural conditions.

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