Abstract

Environmental temperatures that exceed body temperature (Tb) force endothermic animals to rely solely on evaporative cooling to dissipate heat. However, evaporative heat dissipation can be drastically reduced by environmental humidity, imposing a thermoregulatory challenge. The goal of this study was to investigate the effects of humidity on the thermoregulation of desert birds and to compare the sensitivity of cutaneous and respiratory evaporation to reduced vapor density gradients. Rates of evaporative water loss, metabolic rate, and Tb were measured in birds exposed to humidities ranging from ∼2 to 30 g H2O m(-3) (0%-100% relative humidity at 30°C) at air temperatures between 44° and 56°C. In sociable weavers, a species that dissipates heat primarily through panting, rates of evaporative water loss were inhibited by as much as 36% by high humidity at 48°C, and these birds showed a high degree of hyperthermia. At lower temperatures (40°-44°C), evaporative water loss was largely unaffected by humidity in this species. In Namaqua doves, which primarily use cutaneous evaporation, increasing humidity reduced rates of evaporative water loss, but overall rates of water loss were lower than those observed in sociable weavers. Our data suggest that cutaneous evaporation is more efficient than panting, requiring less water to maintain Tb at a given temperature, but panting appears less sensitive to humidity over the air temperature range investigated here.

Highlights

  • Birds are notable for having the highest body temperatures and mass-specific metabolic rates among endothermic vertebrates while being primarily diurnal and nonfossorial

  • The relationship between total evaporative water loss (TEWL) and humidity differed depending on temperature, and there was a significant relationship between TEWL and temperature and between TEWL and humidity

  • We investigated the effect of humidity on thermoregulation in just two species, our data suggest that the primary pathway of evaporative heat dissipation is an important determinant of sensitivity to elevated humidity

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Summary

Introduction

Birds are notable for having the highest body temperatures and mass-specific metabolic rates among endothermic vertebrates while being primarily diurnal and nonfossorial. This suite of traits dictates that birds living in hot environments are exposed to very high environmental and endogenous heat loads (Bartholomew and Cade 1963; Calder and King 1974). Tieleman and Williams (2002) have observed foraging hoopoe larks (Alaemon alaudipes) exposed to operative temperatures as high as 477C, and many species of desert-nesting doves frequently experience operative temperatures of 507–607C or more during incubation

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