| Literature DB >> 35102175 |
Magella Guillemette1,2, David Pelletier3,4.
Abstract
Most birds, unlike reptiles, lay eggs successively to form a full clutch. During egg-laying, birds are highly secretive and prone to disturbance and predation. Using multisensor data loggers, we show that average daily body temperature during egg-laying is significantly increased (1 °C) in wild eider ducks (Somateria mollissima). Strikingly, this increase corresponds to the annual maximum body temperature (40.7 °C), representing a severe annual thermogenic challenge. This egg-laying-induced rise in body temperature may prove to be a common feature of wild birds and could be caused by habitat-related thermoregulatory adjustments and hormonal modulation of reproduction. We conclude our findings with new perspectives of the benefits of high body temperature associated with egg-laying of birds and the potential effect of heat stress that may occur with the future advent of heatwaves.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35102175 PMCID: PMC8803923 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-05516-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Daily variation of average (24 h) body temperature (a) and heart rate (b) in relation to the laying sequence of 12 female Common Eiders. The time series shown starts 10 days before (rapid follicular growth) laying of the first egg and ends 10 days after (first third of incubation) laying the last (5th) egg. Each biological stage is shown in a different color and subdivided further on a five-day basis (pre-lay I and II, post-lay I and II), where the average difference between biological stages (triangle) is shown for each period (c and d). When the bootstrap confidence intervals of the average difference exclude zero, we concluded that a significant difference (5% level) exists between the two time periods. Panels e) and f) show body temperature and resting heart rate variation relative to the female’s presence on land and water, respectively (see Methods). When exclusively on water, body temperature (spearman rs = 0.967) and RHR (rs = 0.767) are positively related (p < 0.05) to days in the laying sequence. In contrast, when exclusively on land, body temperature (rs =− 0.770) and RHR (rs = − 0.781) are negatively related (p < 0.05) to days in the laying sequence.
Figure 2Average daily body temperature (Tbdaily) and resting heart rate (RHR) during pre-laying (blue, n = 12), laying (yellow, n = 12) and incubation (red, n = 11) of female Common Eiders compared to the annual average (pale grey, n = 12) and the annual maximum running average (dark grey, n = 12). When the bootstrap confidence intervals (95%) of the average difference (triangles) between two adjacent variables exclude zero, it was concluded that a significant difference exists between the two variables compared. Note that the five-day annual maximum running average of Tbdaily occurred during laying in 8 females out of 12, whereas none occurred during laying for RHR.