| Literature DB >> 24244861 |
Peter G Tickle1, Samantha C Lean, Kayleigh A R Rose, Avanti P Wadugodapitiya, Jonathan R Codd.
Abstract
The application of artificial loads to mammals and birds has been used to provide insight into the mechanics and energetic cost of terrestrial locomotion. However, only two species of bird have previously been used in loading experiments, the cursorial guinea fowl (Numida meleagris) and the locomotor-generalist barnacle goose (Branta leucopsis). Here, using respirometry and treadmill locomotion, we investigate the energetic cost of carrying trunk loads in a diving bird, the tufted duck (Aythya fuligula). Attachment of back loads equivalent to 10% and 20% of body mass increased the metabolic rate during locomotion (7.94% and 15.92%, respectively) while sternal loads of 5% and 10% had a greater proportional effect than the back loads (metabolic rate increased by 7.19% and 13.99%, respectively). No effect on locomotor kinematics was detected during any load carrying experiments. These results concur with previous reports of load carrying economy in birds, in that there is a less than proportional relationship between increasing load and metabolic rate (found previously in guinea fowl), while application of sternal loads causes an approximate doubling of metabolic rate compared to back loads (reported in an earlier study of barnacle geese). The increase in cost when carrying sternal loads may result from having to move this extra mass dorso-ventrally during respiration. Disparity in load carrying economy between species may arise from anatomical and physiological adaptations to different forms of locomotion, such as the varying uncinate process morphology and hindlimb tendon development in goose, guinea fowl and duck.Entities:
Keywords: Bird; Diving; Load bearing; Locomotion; Respirometry
Year: 2013 PMID: 24244861 PMCID: PMC3828771 DOI: 10.1242/bio.20135538
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Open ISSN: 2046-6390 Impact factor: 2.422
Summary data for the load carrying experiments displaying mean values ± standard error.
Number of individual experimental trials for each loading condition is denoted by ‘n’. Metabolic rate has been converted to metabolic power (W) measurement. Net metabolic rate is the difference between exercise and resting rates. Δ net metabolic rate is the % difference in loaded net rate relative to unloaded net metabolic rate.
The effects of load carrying, bird identity and body mass on resting and net metabolic rate.
Back loads increased net metabolic rate but had no effect on resting metabolic rate. Carrying sternal loads increased resting and net metabolic rate.
Results of GLM to partition the variation in kinematic parameters due to increasing load, bird identity and body mass.
Adding trunk loads did not affect the kinematics of locomotion.