4.7 Article

Post-hatch heat warms adult beaks: irreversible physiological plasticity in Japanese quail

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2013.1436

关键词

ontogeny; thermal window; phenotypic plasticity; Allen's rule

资金

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)
  2. Canadian Foundation for Innovation
  3. Ontario Innovation Trust
  4. NSERC-Undergraduate Student Research Award

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Across taxa, the early rearing environment contributes to adult morphological and physiological variation. For example, in birds, environmental temperature plays a key role in shaping bill size and clinal trends across latitudinal/thermal gradients. Such patterns support the role of the bill as a thermal window and in thermal balance. It remains unknown whether bill size and thermal function are reversibly plastic. We raised Japanese quail in warm (30 degrees C) or cold (15 degrees C) environments and then at a common intermediate temperature. We predicted that birds raised in cold temperatures would develop smaller bills than warm-reared individuals, and that regulation of blood flow to the bill in response to changing temperatures would parallel the bill's role in thermal balance. Cold-reared birds developed shorter bills, although bill size exhibited 'catch-up' growth once adults were placed at a common temperature. Despite having lived in a common thermal environment as adults, individuals that were initially reared in the warmth had higher bill surface temperatures than cold-reared individuals, particularly under cold conditions. This suggests that blood vessel density and/or the control over blood flow in the bill retained a memory of early thermal ontogeny. We conclude that post-hatch temperature reversibly affects adult bill morphology but irreversibly influences the thermal physiological role of bills and may play an underappreciated role in avian energetics.

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