How hornbills handle heat: sex-specific thermoregulation in the southern yellow-billed hornbill

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Abstract

At a global scale, thermal physiology is correlated with climatic variables such as temperature and aridity. There is also evidence that thermoregulatory traits vary with fine-scale microclimate, but this has received less attention in endotherms. Here, we test the hypothesis that avian thermoregulation varies with microclimate and behavioural constraints in a non-passerine bird. Male and female southern yellowbilled hornbills (Tockus leucomelas) experience markedly different microclimates while breeding, with the female sealing herself into a tree cavity and moulting all her flight feathers during the breeding attempt, becoming entirely reliant on the male for provisioning. We examined interactions between resting metabolic rate (RMR), evaporative water loss (EWL) and core body temperature (Tb) at air temperatures (Ta) between 30° and 52° in male and female hornbills, and quantified evaporative cooling efficiencies and heat tolerance limits. At thermoneutral Ta, neither RMR, EWL nor Tbdiffered between sexes. At Ta> 40°, however,RMRand EWL of females were significantly lower than those of males, by ~13% and ~17%, respectively, despite similar relationships between Tb and Ta, maximum ratio of evaporative heat loss to metabolic heat production and heat tolerance limits (~50). These sex-specific differences in hornbill thermoregulation support the hypothesis that avian thermal physiology can vary within species in response to fine-scalemicroclimatic factors. In addition,Q10 for RMR varied substantially, with Q10≤2 in some individuals, supporting recent arguments that active metabolic suppression may be an underappreciated aspect of endotherm thermoregulation in the heat.

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Jaarsveld, B., Bennett, N. C., Czenze, Z. J., Kemp, R., Vande Ven, T. M. F. N., Cunningham, S. J., & McKechnie, A. E. (2021). How hornbills handle heat: sex-specific thermoregulation in the southern yellow-billed hornbill. Journal of Experimental Biology, 224(4). https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.232777

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